Example sentences of "think of [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 So that fact that you ca n't think of a next question Phil
2 I say to the orchestra , this is not the way ; you must think of the last bars as a fermata , a fermata that lasts the entire length of the coda .
3 Twentieth century readers may think of the eighteenth century as a time when dirt was everywhere , and that personal hygiene was abysmal .
4 When Anne left them she thought of the first time she had stood on that corner saying goodnight to John .
5 He thought of the seventeenth century poisoner , Madame de Brinvilliers , who had run round the hospitals of Paris poisoning people for ‘ practice ’ .
6 He thought of the last time he 'd seen Dad .
7 But sometimes he only thought of the next performance .
8 Now most of the camp 's 700,000 yearly visitors , coming from Israel , Germany , America and elsewhere , think of the second world war as the distant past .
9 At times I think of the first contacts the people of St Kilda had with the outside world .
10 But think of the last time you had a meal out and the service you encountered .
11 ( ii ) In redrafting their work they should be encouraged to think of the first draft as tentative so that they are prepared to rethink their whole approach in the light of their own critical appraisal or of their discussions with their peers or teacher .
12 And Phil was thinking I wonder whether this is about and I 'm trying to think of the next question .
13 He did n't want , either , to think of the third Zorzi brother , known to the world as Nicholai Giorgio de' Acciajuoli .
14 Teachers Sarah , Caroline , Else and Wendy send a big ‘ Thank You ’ to everyone who supported their first ever Rally and helped to make it a big success — they are actually thinking of a second one this year !
15 I was thinking of the first one which was reproduced in Herbert Read .
16 I remember thinking of the 121st Psalm as we looked longingly towards the hills — ‘ I will lift up my eyes … ’
17 When we came out of the Clerecia , after dipping hands in the holy water stoup and placing a drop on each other 's brows , as we had seen the novios and novias do ( the boy on entering a church would dip his hand in the water and transfer a drop to his fiancée 's fingertip so that they could cross themselves in unison ) , we would go into La Casa de las Conchas next to the Clerecia , with elaborate wrought-iron window-grilles and its tranquil courtyard , and sit there quietly for a while , thinking of the next poem , or of the one we were working on .
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