Example sentences of "think [adv] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The particular acts found by the judge are we think rather on the borderline of what can properly be regarded as constituting possession , always apart from the consideration of adverse possession .
2 Better to be in philosophy than have the facilities which has greatly benefited the charge payers and the people who think right across the board .
3 I think all along the line I felt a great sense of privilege at being able to share the gospel , and that God had chosen , and was going to use me .
4 That to me is worth more than silver , for I think much about the state of the land in these strange times , with snow falling in midsummer and the Giants wandering the hills . ’
5 Markey went even further ; instead of stopping the searchers in their tracks , she had the subjects talk or think aloud throughout the search .
6 This made her think suddenly of the pain which Neil Cochrane must have endured , so that she felt pity for him , after all .
7 Should the man concerned think better of the relationship ( probably being more prey to the office gossips ) , not only is the woman left feeling she 's suffered a loss of face , as well as emotional hurt , but also bad feeling at the office may impair her work .
8 ‘ Oh , come , Wilson — think better of the man than that .
9 I think Alone In the Dark just happens to be one of those games .
10 He believes that sheep farmers who think only about the pound in their pocket could be doing themselves a great disservice .
11 Many people , on hearing the word ‘ relationships ‘ , think only of the interaction between one man and one woman .
12 I lived outside myself , trying to forget the shin , and think only of the post office at Reggane .
13 They were like two children , who think only of the moment .
14 Think perhaps of a piece of lea , what could you do with that ?
15 On the other hand I felt I could scarcely ask you to wait while I dealt with the strawboard — you were by this time I think just on the verge of a few conventional politenesses about my work , an awkward stage in conversations of this sort which is difficult to endure gracefully but which is even more difficult to interrupt .
16 If I may broaden it away from erm the Cardinal Newman School and think probably of a lot of East Sussex Comprehensive Schools , I think we have all been , in the schools , in the last few years , working hard to establish this openness , and I think that the closed concept of the school , the school that locks children out at break or locks children out at dinner time , which only allows parents to come in for a phoney Open Day when there are a few children there , they are things largely , I think , of the past and they are the closed society .
17 Lawrence takes a deep breath and starts off again , with this massive approach , comes in now to , it 's short and it ends in a way I think probably off the body , he tried to take the bottom hand away again , that , that they do seemed to be trying this angle of attack at him , as Botham there at leg gully and a short leg and they 're trying to be , do n't forget the balls at 's ribcage , he 's certainly troubled by that one .
18 But now , I think , there are signs that er things are beginning to pick up , certainly we 're being told things are beginning to pick up and I think probably as an office generally , we 're experiencing that upturn , although er every time we get some special job in , suddenly we think we are at the end of a recession and perhaps , you know , it 's the next job that really we ought to be looking to .
19 Er certainly until the I think probably until the end of the war .
20 Think carefully about every expenditure decision you make , whether it be an external telephone call or sanctioning an exhibition tour .
21 If you are to attend the monthly progress review meeting , think carefully about the end-result you wish to achieve by attending .
22 Think carefully about the relationship between pay , profit and performance .
23 Think carefully about the meaning of the question(s) Questions may be straightforward or they may be deliberately provocative .
24 Think carefully about the meaning of the question/subject posed The same question may admit to several different interpretations .
25 When using woven stripes , think carefully about the fabric .
26 Think also about the garment pieces .
27 I would like to say in general Mr I think that as a Committee we should welcome this report which does , it really does er has done a very thorough job and ha a a and provides us now with a s understandable framework and and time scale work when you 've got target and when brought forward or shown to any member of the complex that that erm I think provisionally with the backlog of what is now ready to tackle the result onto our and commissioner is grant er , er grant , erm there will be , it will be like an enormous benefits not just in those areas that John has taken us to but in general atmosphere which kind of be very tense and competition and I think we 'll be , be seeing the action in this token er within it will be er target time , erm real pro real progress will be this I think the feeling of that will going , come by will , will , will be a lot of ruling er in this area and maybe even start to er leave the question from er as a result and the signal to the users of our serv , of the services and erm would go out of here in a planned way and in answer to er fairly speedily and you know what or reduce the erm the aggro .
28 As far as Mr Collier 's point er alternative policies concerned , I think listening to it and only half having perhaps digested the full implication , I think really as a matter of principle we 're not un unsympathetic to a lot of what what a lot of people are suggesting there .
29 They said twelve , but I think really for the humour alone they needed to be about fifteen or sixteen because they did n't understand it .
30 But erm I think really at the end of the day staff have only really had just that one day workshop ,
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