US /ˈmɚsi/
・UK /'mɜ:sɪ/
You have more mercy and more sensitivity towards the pain of others.
in life, sometimes that's when you really do come to understand the word mercy.
OBAMA: And then what you've got is folks like my grandmother at the mercy of the private
And when you move to a voucher system, you are putting seniors at the mercy of those
You should've picked Mercy!
You should have picked mercy.
He's so in tune with the dynamics of film narrative that he can construct a plot with so much forward momentum that even when he gives you all the clues, you remain at his mercy until the very final shot.
you remain at his mercy until the very final shot.
Your body has crushed the illegal Tumor Town without mercy.
Instead of starting with police, swat teams go right in to tear Tumor Town down, killing its inhabitants without mercy.
At the mercy of male physicians who prescribe total inactivity of mind and body, she's already removed from her roles of mother and house manager when the story begins.
That means seniors and their families are often at the mercy of Medicare and Medicaid policies, which don't favor at-home health care. Medicaid is not a super generous payer, and it often pushes individuals into nursing homes before they would like to go there, basically.
I love animals a lot, but when it comes to chicken, I do not give them mercy.
-I have no mercy for the chickens.
But we're not entirely at the mercy of the demands of our orbitofrontal cortex.
So in the end, we are at least not fully at the mercy of our reward neurons.
We also crave to find a job that will allow us not to be at the mercy of other people, whom we may deep down fear and distrust.