Example sentences of "think of [pron] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'll think of something else ter 'elp us through . |
2 | Although at the time they were made up of an apparently infinite chain of familiar days , I can think of them now only as a whole . |
3 | In Romans 12:3 Paul says , ‘ For by the grace given me I say to every one of you : Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought , but rather think of yourself with sober judgment , in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you . ’ |
4 | But before that before the sell out concert tour in Ireland , did you ever think I wonder what they 'll think of us back home I wonder if we 'll still do it ? |
5 | I ca n't think of anything else either no . |
6 | She could not think of anything even remotely polite to say . |
7 | Which would be fine if she could think of anything even remotely amusing to say , she thought wryly . |
8 | There was an overwhelming drive to win the war : Britain was not the aggressor and the country could think of itself once more as a nation with a mission . |
9 | As he raised a curious eyebrow she elaborated with satisfaction , ‘ I can think of someone far more likely to have put a torch to G.W. Fashions than myself . ’ |
10 | As Paul-Henri Spaak was later to remind the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe in 1964 , ‘ Those who drew up the Rome Treaty … did not think of it as essentially economic ; they thought of it as a stage on the way to political union ’ . |
11 | We do n't think of it in quite those terms . |
12 | He can not think of anyone else currently playing who can do that . |
13 | Then she blurted the thought out : ‘ D' you know I 've never thought of you as really English . |
14 | I 've thought of you so often . ’ |
15 | He had never thought of it in quite those terms , but it was true . |
16 | ‘ I 'd never thought of it that openly . |
17 | A stab of fear went through Anne as she thought of them out there in that inferno . |
18 | I thought of it as just being a friend . |
19 | This did not lead him to question the principle of majority decisions ; but it did lead him to pay attention to the social , cultural and economic conditions in which the will of all , or the will of the majority , would be more rather than less likely to coincide with " the general will " , by which Rousseau meant what all of us would will if we thought of ourselves not as private individuals but as citizens identifying ourselves with the good of the community . |
20 | I used to miss my mother and father dreadfully when I was younger , and now I feel a certain amount of guilt that I need them so little , think of them so seldom . |
21 | Think of something else instead . ’ |
22 | Do n't , please do n't , think of it just as ‘ floatless Fair Isle ’ . |
23 | ‘ You 've obviously NEVER been in love or you d never think of it so vulgarly ! |
24 | This coloration is extremely attractive to human eyes and most people think of it as just another feline coat pattern , like tabby or tortoiseshell , but it arises in a completely different way . |
25 | ‘ You and I were both born here , in Cork , but you think of it as Cork , Ireland , while I think of it as just Cork , where I live . ’ |
26 | ‘ We 'll have to think of something else then , ’ she said . |
27 | ‘ People would be wrong to think of me as just a centre forward who is good in the air . |
28 | One girl in particular … he refused to think of her right now . |
29 | I do n't want to think of her any more . ’ |
30 | He did not begin to think of her constantly again until the journey back north . |