Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But there is a sense of obligation on my part.
She felt, in a measure, a certain sense of obligation.
"There's a sense of obligation that each person has to continue on and to make the world better for everybody."
Making them feel some sense of obligation toward the hunters could help.
It takes more than a sense of obligation to be a good parent.
Does he feel any sense of obligation to bring great black stories to the screen?
Some weird sense of obligation, the sort you had to a dog.
I think there was a sense of obligation, but they never explained its source.
This is why we have a heightened sense of obligation to Europe.
Has social and economic change weakened people's sense of obligation or responsibility to provide support?
But with each passing year, her sense of obligation toward the city she calls home has grown.
"But, no, all I had and have is a sense of obligation."
"Back then, all the services needed to do was appeal to people's sense of obligation and patriotism."
"I find that sense of obligation easier to tap into."
It is not that they haven't tried to be, always with a sense of obligations never met.
You have, for that, my eternal gratitude and sense of obligation.
She thought it was a shame to burden their young lives with "a sense of obligation".
He had made the offer simply out of a sense of obligation.
"And I also feel a certain sense of obligation."
"I have a great sense of obligation and determination to succeed," he says.
So it was with a surly sense of obligation that I saw this show the first time.
One, the game has been so good to me, so I have a sense of obligation to it.
"Because they hate that sense of obligation, many just don't come at all."
Could it be that this underlying sense of obligation has weakened over time?
But apparently she felt a sense of obligation toward our uncle and would not leave him, especially after the shop fell on hard times.