Example sentences of "think i " in BNC.

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1 I hope , however , that you will not think me Panglossian when I suggest that we are now not far from that point .
2 ‘ If you think I 'll fall for that , you must think me very stupid indeed .
3 ‘ You must think me terribly rude , ’ said Blunset .
4 But if you could see me , you 'd think me but a sorry object to hobble to an altar .
5 What kind of fool do you think me , not to know what 's closest to your heart ? ’
6 I hope you do not think me unduly vain with regard to this last matter ; it is just that one never knows when one might be obliged to give out that one is from Darlington Hall , and it is important that one be attired at such times in a manner worthy of one 's position .
7 But you may think me merely biased if I say that my own father could in many ways be considered to rank with such men , and that his career is the one I have always scrutinized for a definition of ‘ dignity ’ .
8 She began to climb the staircase , but I stopped her , saying : ‘ Miss Kenton , please do n't think me unduly improper in not ascending to see my father in his deceased condition just at this moment .
9 do n't think me elitist or snobby …
10 That you do n't think me bad . ’
11 How greedy everyone must think me .
12 ‘ I know you must think me awful .
13 Do you think me quite mad ? ’
14 Does she think me so stupid that I do n't know they do that ?
15 Well , now that I 'm too big for me boots , d' you think me legs 'll sprout ? ’
16 D' you really think me legs are pretty ? ’
17 ‘ You 'll think me catty , but you asked for it .
18 You must think me a terrible whiner . "
19 You must think me very gauche . "
20 Why should he think me cruel
21 And Herbert , you may think me lucky .
22 ‘ Please do n't think me ungrateful , ’ she said tentatively .
23 ‘ David , I hope your mother did n't think me dreadfully insensitive- ’
24 Do you think me like them ?
25 If I should tell at a tea table in London , that I have crossed the Atlantick in an open boat , how they 'd shudder , and what a fool they 'd think me to expose myself to such danger . ’
26 Will think me callow , inexperienced .
27 ‘ You will think me a terrible woman .
28 ‘ Miss Abbott , ’ the Rector said , advancing into the room , his legs severely hampered by the clinging children , ‘ you will think me abominably lax not to have called upon you since your arrival .
29 Alexandra said , ‘ You will both think me the poorest — sport , but I 'm going to refuse . ’
30 I never thought I should be — be improper to come , that you should think me patronizing . ’
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