Example sentences of "[pron] thought " in BNC.
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1 | All these complications arose simply because someone thought a smaller cabin would be big enough but had not bothered to consult the professionals . |
2 | The Nefertari was a veteran , it was said , of something between 30 and 40 years on the river ; someone thought she had been built on the hull of a much older Nile steamer , and another that she might be a pharaoh 's reconstituted sun-boat , disinterred , like the others , near the Great Pyramid . |
3 | At first someone thought it might be a salmon but how could a salmon get into Loch Craig ? |
4 | ‘ Is there a chance Ed phoned Sandy and told her something important — something so important someone thought it was dangerous that she went on living ? ’ |
5 | Someone thought of my self-portraits was of a native boy . |
6 | ‘ Well , someone thought she was important and garrotted her . |
7 | It was removed , apparently because someone thought it might become the butt of jokes . |
8 | ‘ Maybe someone thought I needed some fizz , you know ? |
9 | Several months later , after much mental sweating , someone thought to ask , was the King right ? |
10 | I suppose someone thought it was a collectable item but we could have done without it |
11 | And so there 's a big mountain range running up the middle of the country , someone thought once was the English Channel . |
12 | He recalls , ‘ When I was sentenced I thought I 'd be killed straight away . |
13 | Sometimes I thought I could hear the noise of the rapids . |
14 | ‘ Oh , I thought they 'd taken care of them , ’ said Jenny . |
15 | I got as far as Grantchester and I thought , fuck it , yes , why not ? |
16 | I kept walking , past the old mill , right up around the bend to where the council property starts , and I thought , oh , shit , council houses . |
17 | But it was n't as bad as I thought it might be . |
18 | I thought it was better going to drama school direct rather than via a university and if you 're going to act I think that 's the way . |
19 | So after four years I thought I 'd survived . |
20 | Not that I wish to say , he wrote , that everything is inevitable , on the contrary , I wish to assert emphatically that nothing is inevitable and nothing was inevitable , neither what I did nor what I thought , neither what I felt nor what I suffered , yet everything was necessary , a necessary beginning and necessary Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) is misleading , since it was only after I had begun that I knew I had begun , while before I had begun , before the 27 July 1967 , there was no beginning , as there was no end , there was no time and there was no freedom from time , only endless cups of coffee , endless cups of tea , endless biscuits and endless bacon sandwiches . |
21 | Like cutting into the surface of a pond , I thought , wrote Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) , like pressing paint onto the surface of a pond , with total concentration and total folly . |
22 | All that and more went through my mind , wrote Harsnet , as I sat there in the moonlight in the silence , but it was as if it was the glass which was telling me this , that the glass was my mind as I thought that , or my mind the glass , and that was the reason for the fear and the cold and also for the sense of growing excitement and a fear then , a different kind of fear , that I would not be able to do anything with this excitement , that it would be my failure , my failure to realize what I now saw were the real possibilities of the glass , a failure for which I would never be able to forgive myself , though a part of me would always know or perhaps only believe that it was in the nature of my insight that there could be no realization of it , that it was precisely an insight about non-realization , but by then , wrote Harsnet , it had all become too complicated , too extreme , I did not want to know any of it until it was all over , until I had made my effort , perhaps it had been a mistake to come in and sit there with the glass through the night with the moon shining so brightly , it must have been full , or nearly full , unnaturally bright anyway , something to do with the solstice perhaps , to sit in the room with the glass alone or with the moon alone might have been bearable , in the dark with the glass or in the moonlight in an empty room , but the two together , the glass and the moon , that was perhaps the mistake . |
23 | And then , just after I 'd fallen asleep , as I thought , there was the damned organ moaning away and it was 6 a.m. again . |
24 | I THOUGHT Joe Hyam would like to know that we changed our menu four months ago to the fixed-price system . |
25 | FURTHER to your article TECs slammed over funding red tape ( Caterer , 22–28 August ) , I thought you might be interested to hear the other side of the coin . |
26 | As an individual who worked for over 10 years in relatively senior positions for two of the ‘ major brewers ’ , I thought it ironic that here was one set of red tape specialists accusing another . |
27 | ‘ Yes , but I thought it must be some arch or something that everybody had to stoop to go through . |
28 | But he did eat it , and I thought he would . |
29 | You had n't told your wife about it , so I thought it was probably bad news , and that it might have upset you enough to — well , to do something . |
30 | for a while there I thought I was losing my touch . ’ |