Example sentences of "think [prep] these " in BNC.

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1 That 's all he ever thinks about these days . ’
2 Now let us stop and think about these last few words .
3 " Well , sir , " said Hazel , " my brother does n't really think about these feelings he gets .
4 ‘ It got people to sit down and think about these things .
5 A mother should n't even think about these things , I suppose .
6 Right , let's just think about these .
7 And it 's really to make people to attract peoples ' attention and to make them think about these issues .
8 You , you actually , the estimators do think about these things , believe it or not .
9 You 've just got ta think about these things Kimmy have n't we ?
10 What what do you think about these erm the this tulip thing and these trees down by erm the church ?
11 ‘ I do n't know what the Prince will think of these bare walls ’ , Ann East said to her room-mates .
12 In relation to the tap and glass metaphor we can think of these as being something like a plunger that fits over the glass and which forces down the level of stress .
13 At the most general level , therefore , it is convenient to think of the speech community as having a ‘ shape ’ and of language in the community as being capable of displaying patterns , much as we might think of these other dynamic phenomena as displaying shapes and patterns .
14 Okay what do you think of these words ?
15 What do they think of these flats ?
16 In August , near Worth , he sent his mother " a memoir of the horribly devastated battlefield , scattered all over with countless mournful remains and reeking with dead bodies " and in December he wrote to a friend : " if one is to avoid losing all courage , one must not think of these frightful things any more " It is apparent how far removed this mood was from any chauvinistic or militaristic fervour — nor would we particularly expect any such fervour ( despite long established misconceptions about Nietzsche 's attitudes ) from one whose ideas of German nationhood were moulded so largely by the cultural preoccupations of a Hölderlin or a Schopenhauer .
17 One can think of these fluctuations as pairs of particles of light or gravity that appear together at some time , move apart , and then come together again and annihilate each other .
18 Looking back on the almost thirty-year-long era of the series , one does not automatically think of these essential mammerial features of the femme fatale when talking about Miss Sims .
19 As a rough-and-ready guide , one can think of these gestural usages as requiring at least a video-tape of the speech event if the proper interpretation is to be available from a recording .
20 Cor blimey , I 'll think of these places these days .
21 All the same , what would you think of these reasons for inserting a piece of autobiography into the second defence of the English people , a defence of course for cutting off the head of Charles the First .
22 Whatever Laura privately thought of these pictures , revolutionary in their way , she insisted they be used .
23 A man 's voice replied , ‘ Elizabeth , dearest Elizabeth , you must have thought of these things fully as much as I !
24 If Berowne had thought in these terms , then this was an incongruous place in which to receive so honoured a visitation .
25 But Anselm did not think in these terms .
26 Such exploration may even dispose of the attraction ; this is in any case to be hoped for , if one thinks on these lines , as resolution of the transference/counter transference situation of which psychoanalysis and other therapies take account .
27 ‘ It 's time you thought about these matters . ’
28 At first I thought of these ideas as jewels formed in a matrix of rock like a diamond or like a fragile vase fired in a kiln at Ching-Te-Chin — an emperor 's gift .
29 C. I. Lewis used to claim that basic beliefs were ‘ certain' or ‘ incorrigible ’ ( Lewis , 1952 and 1946 , ch. 7 ) ; it is not always clear whether he thought of these as the same as being infallible or not .
30 I thought of these imaginary children without hope and quite without fondness .
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