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Sun 13 Aug, 2017 11:21 am
Is it always "to FEEL nostalgia for something/someone" or is it possible "to HAVE nostalgia for something/someone"?
If so, would you please give me a few examples?
Thank you.
It is possible to use both 'feel' and 'have' (and other verbs) before nouns which are names of emotions or feelings, including nostalgia.
Those born from the 1930s on were more likely to have nostalgia induced by food odors and less likely to have nostalgia induced by nature odors
A lot of designers still have nostalgia for the past
So when people like me became exiled, they began to have nostalgia for Iran.
Some people feel nostalgia for their schooldays.
Nostalgia is commonly nationalized: Americans feel nostalgia for their own Old West rather than for th western settlement periods of Canada or Brazil.
I feel nostalgia for the TV guides of the past, when the number of channels was small.
Is it too early to feel nostalgia for the 1990s? Apparently not.
@centrox,
I feel nostalgia for my early schooldays. ( When I thought war was history )