Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I never knew how a man's nerves may be harrowed before.
It harrowed all our hearts to go without trying to free you.
Even if they'd found it, the atmosphere would have harrowed them.
Harrowed by loss, he opened his eyes to a bloody wash of light.
But it took 55 minutes after they harrowed the surface and the running of the Preakness.
A plague epidemic then harrowed the town and further reduced its population.
"We always try to get them on the track when it's freshly harrowed.
Even through the blood she could discern the meticulous way that the words had harrowed into him.
The ground would have to be plowed and harrowed.
The question harrowed me and I sat up, looking around, then called Albert's name.
Tod can take all this - whereas I'm harrowed by it.
Shadow fell in defense, for no man died by command of the prince to be harrowed.
But let me warn you not to let your feelings be harrowed.
Schultz looked up at her earnestly, his brown eyes harrowed with sadness.
There, in the Daily Express, was a story that harrowed him.
The same thoughts, the same anguish harrowed both their hearts.
Ford and Arthur decided just to relax and be harrowed.
Then the pasture isn't half as good next year as if you'd harrowed it.
Race times are always an entirely different creature, though, since the track is watered and harrowed between races.
He felt plowed and harrowed, more thoroughly worked over than by the three thugs in the alley.
"They had just harrowed the track before the Preakness," Miller said.
Harrowed by sudden uncertainty, he lowered his arms to his sides.
When the Normans harrowed the North, they didn't do such an effective job!
A touch of the old pugilist's gleam returned to a figure harrowed by hospitalization.
The funny thing is, sometimes other jocks don't even notice the track was being harrowed."