What made him think of such an outrageously absurd idea I can't say for sure. |
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Just think of the spate of double centuries we saw last season, in addition to 2 triples and one quadruple. |
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Then, with your mind, think of calming the pain, easing it until it abates and is gone. |
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The experience which abductees think of as an alien abduction experience may be due to certain brain states. |
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I mean, when I think of Cambodia in the 1970s, I think abject misery, suffering and genocide on a Stalin-like scale. |
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Surely the time is past when the Caucasian peoples had to think of Persia as an enemy. |
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But once you're inside it, it's like a waking dream, evoking feelings you can't think of names for. |
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The man is a walking encyclopedia, with vast knowledge of history, the classics, politics, and anything else one can possibly think of. |
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If you care what others think of you, want to be happier and make others happier, then walk your talk. |
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Few students think of Baltimore as a hip place with affordable, walkable shops and bars and restaurants where they want to go. |
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You probably think of walkie-talkies as toys you've out-grown, but high-tech versions of the two-way radios are making a major comeback. |
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You can think of it as an American alternative to those famous London betting shops that will make book on just about anything. |
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I want aerials, spread eagles, toe touches, and anything else you can think of. |
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I had no chance to react and dread to think of the consequences had I been a few inches to the right hand side of the road. |
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If this were a regular occurrence I would dread to think of what effect it would have on me. |
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It was my privilege to serve with him, and I can't think of anything better than to have the opportunity to renew that relationship. |
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I love being round young writers, I like to think of writers as a community, as a race. |
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Just think of the warm glow you feel when you tuck into a plate of tender slices of roast beef and perfectly-risen Yorkshire puddings. |
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You think of yourself as independent, you want to be independent, but you depend on Alex more than anyone. |
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When you think of high technology, you probably imagine a software engineer sitting behind a computer, coding some new program. |
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And I guess just looking at today and yesterday, what do you think of the overall process? |
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Yet it's hard to think of anyone who has pursued power with such relentless single-handedness. |
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You are the first person they think of when they want helpers for the lamington drive. |
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But when you think of it, it allows you to start the engine, get into gear and release the brake with one hand. |
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We think it right to construe it in relation to what one would normally think of as legal costs. |
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You could think of it in those terms, or you could just enjoy it as a rant about those obnoxious little yappy dogs. |
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The next time you get a rejection slip, try to think of it as a merciful release. |
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When we think of traditional food, some folks get a vision of a big bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken and a family box of fries. |
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That's all I can think of now, but new characters will be introduced and I will allude to them. |
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For example, it is difficult to think of a more Scottish dish than haggis, but this was served with a generous ladle of Drambuie sauce. |
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It is daft to even think of going winter fishing without some form of waterproof all-in-one or two piece suit. |
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I can't think of any other suitable explanation for such consistent kerning and x-height. |
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It is possible to think of all sorts of offbeat things or things that would sound trite. |
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Steele also hopes to persuade young Scots now living in London to think of joining a Scottish regiment. |
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Now think of some possible ways to link being gay, engaging in risk behaviors, experiencing hostility and alienation. |
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I don't know about you, but I find it very hard indeed to think of writing as a sensible occupation. |
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What would Abbey's principal monkey-wrencher think of a trail named after him? |
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What do people think of the additional footage, re-edited scenes and the new score? |
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This guy is speaking in a quick, nervous, reedy sort of voice that makes me think of Woody Allen. |
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Whatever you think of their relationship, and heaven knows it hasn't been an easy one, their love has endured. |
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When most people hear about Memphis they think of rednecks and country people. |
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The only reason I could think of that she wouldn't answer me would be if she was injured or knocked out. |
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It is also too simplistic to think of all monks as living off the fat of the land and benefiting from the labour of others. |
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I can't think of a green remedy for woodlice, but as far as the snails are concerned, scattering slug pellets on the ground should help a bit. |
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Just think of the enhanced abilities we could get from eating those wonder foodstuffs. |
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I don't think of our show in terms of music theatre, because it's original, fairly serious and it isn't kitsch or camp. |
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We try and think of something clever, something witty, current, hard to pronounce. |
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I was thinking of something funny or witty to say to him, but I couldn't think of anything. |
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But seriously, can you think of a more evil force in music than the major record labels? |
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I always think of Rachel with loving thoughts and hope that we will reconnect soon. |
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We may think of this chapter and the two that follow as the walls and roof of our wisely built Gospelreading house. |
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To have wingnuts like her commenting on legal ethics is like asking a wolf pack what they think of sheep herding. |
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Very graceful it was too, like a blue bird of prey but without feathers or wings or talons or any other bird features, come to think of it. |
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He could think of nothing he had ever written that he would not eagerly recant. |
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Microsoft Windows users can think of a terminal as like a DOS prompt or command window. |
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Trying to decide if I ever heard a single bell or wind chime that sounded out of tune, I couldn't think of a single instance. |
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The state government has yet to think of having a new bridge over the khud. |
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I think of the Khoisan, and I wonder if Saartje Bartman, who sprang from that blood, ever walked here. |
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I can think of no one in the whole world who could play a scheming windbag of a womaniser better than him! |
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As he rattled cups and spoons and kettles, I examined the box of teabags and tried to think of something charming to say. |
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I put an arm around him and try to think of something comforting to say but my mind's gone blank. |
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I can't think of any show I've ever been involved in that had such a kerfuffle around it. |
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It was a success that encouraged him to think of himself as the guardian of Reaganism. |
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Apart from Marcel Duchamp's first ready-made, a bicycle wheel on a stool from 1919, how many art images of bicycles can you think of? |
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It's nice to think of them picturing Father Christmas and his sleigh whooshing across frosty rooftops. |
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She appears to value nothing except publicity, to think of nothing beyond momentary pleasure. |
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When people think of Turkey and shopping, they tend to think of rugs, kelims and other fabrics. |
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My keitai sure doesn't take this good of pictures, and I am too dumb to think of buying a digital camera. |
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I can't think of anyone at all that has a grudge against us and I have no idea if it's the same person or different people each time. |
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Whatever you may think of the lady's literary ability, an Agatha Christie whodunit is going to be cleverly plotted, make no mistake. |
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He also found it helpful to think of the people who'd benefit from the charities he was running for. |
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But I hate him because he always seems to be reading my mind and telling me what I think of myself. |
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You think of a number, the computer reads your mind and guesses the number. |
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We need to stop worrying about what others think of us and make pictures that elicit a gut reaction. |
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When we think of observing the law, of keeping the commandments, it is the will that first comes to mind. |
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We like the idea of that because it reminds us to think of the future rather than keep looking to the past. |
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Secondly before the raving mad dogs tear me to pieces, think of this as a ray of hope. |
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We black people like to think of ourselves as somehow outside of mainstream white culture. |
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They think of me as an idiot, a fool, some disheveled thing rather than one of them. |
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I think of Mapplethorpe as being the first artist to aestheticize the gay male community. |
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Yes, but the people who produce it also think of it as a threatening aesthetic. |
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Can you think of an incident in your life where you spoke or acted rashly in anger? |
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Now I'm not going to be able to think of anything else but her ears while watching the movie. |
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Last week he ran a competition whereby you had to think of a way to blow a thousand quid so that you could win the same amount. |
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I always think of shows like this whenever a local media critic starts talking about the ranters on AM talk radio. |
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I can't off-hand think of any non-competitive system that can establish this, since the act of ranking is competitive in itself. |
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I can think of nothing finer to do for this general officer today than promote her to the rank of major general. |
|
Regret is the type of emotion that makes you think of past times and think how stupid and juvenile you were because of the choices you made. |
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Rhodes was trying not to think of another day of rancid food, polluted water and waiting for buses that never came. |
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They have to think of one policy package and strategy to stop the triple whammy of falling stocks, bonds and the yen. |
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When you run out of paper or the words you write are jumbled up, think of the hourglass passing sand from the top to the bottom. |
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Actually, come to think of it, the person responsible for this here jumble of junk should be punished, not rewarded. |
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After we'd done all we could possibly think of and then some, I yanked on the pull cord. |
|
Many medical, physiological, or anatomical terms have origins that we never even think of. |
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When he asked about rescheduling the meeting, Josh couldn't think of any graceful way to back out. |
|
Some people might think of judgment and forgiveness as incompatible, or as a contradiction in terms. |
|
If you doubt it, think of Chelsea, the favourites to win what admen call the Premiership. |
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It would be wonderful to see the town enter the competition if only to see what the outside adjudicators and judges think of our town. |
|
We think of Washington at Valley Forge, or we think of Washington with his ragtag band of militia men beating the British. |
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When you think of burning calories, you probably don't think of weightlifting. |
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But such attention to detail seemed to clash with a laminated menu, which made me think of tacky burger joints and sad little cafes. |
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As a stage actor and, lately, a television star, he is probably the last person you would think of as a playwright of note. |
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I can't think of a single guitarist I've ever known in my life that didn't do the duckwalk given half a chance. |
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We used to have to think of the names of flowers as answers to puzzles, or to put together the pieces of a picture, like a jigsaw puzzle. |
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Felt good to be there, though, and I ran a fairly zippy 3.25 km, so went home feeling springy to think of some more show ideas. |
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I think of it, instead, as trying to help them articulate their ideas, analyze the material, explain what they think. |
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How nice it would be if we could all think of the common weal when we make use of mass media! |
|
I'm ashamed of the state of the litter-strewn waysides and wonder what visitors to this country must think of us. |
|
The word 'innocent' literally means not nocent. So whatever you think of as innocent, these people are the opposite. |
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Try as one might, it is hard to think of another jailbird who was allowed to publish a book while still doing porridge. |
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Camie and I amused ourselves very well and dear old Betty was very kind to us, helping us in every way she could think of. |
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I will think of her laughing at the ridiculousness of what we're both doing. |
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Despite being backstabbers and fiercely jealous of each other, I think of writers as an international guild. |
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It also made me think whether there's a single other track I could think of with a comma and question mark in it. |
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I'd drunk from streams or water butts, not a very sensible thing to do, but when you're fighting, you don't think of sensible things. |
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So think of this album as a sort of crossover for both me, the reviewer, and you, the reader, to the world of Latin music. |
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Many think of companies as amoral, profit-hungry beasts that will do anything to promote their own selfish interests. |
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All of us tend to think of port as a Yuletide tipple but we should consider it as an option at other times. |
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And think of the faith-healing couple that refuses to account for the whereabouts of their infant. |
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Off the top of my head, I can think of several wonderful accounts of the Tchaikovsky, but when I get to Beethoven, I become rather picky. |
|
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I think of myself as a very friendly, easy, accessible guy, but I seem to intimidate people, or at least the fact of who I am intimidates people. |
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At the weekly outdoor markets, think of your store cupboard instead of your wardrobe. |
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I can't think of a post sarcastic enough to do justice to this absurdity at the moment. |
|
Mention ballroom dancing and most people think of smiling couples dressed in designer suits and glitzy dresses waltzing, quickstepping and foxtrotting across the hardwood. |
|
What do you think of books that are written today aimed at younger demographics, like The Hunger Games. |
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We were on her roof talking and trying to come up with ideas, to think of alternatives to renting a studio. |
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It is one of the only times I can think of when life imitates art to the very bleeding edge of an aluminum shank. |
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You might think of ant larvae as just a stage in the development of an ant. |
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Suddenly she walked in on his life and he could think of nothing but her. |
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When you think of what it takes to make your favorite spirit, ingredients like grapes, barley, or herbs probably come to mind. |
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You now really get the notion that what other people think of you is none of your beeswax. |
|
I think of one whom the poor of a great city know as their benefactress and friend. |
|
Just think of all the fun the political media will have with another Republican-on-Republican brawl, groans Fleischer. |
|
We think of it like bricklaying, farming, or any other seemingly menial skill. |
|
So we tried to think of the freshest, healthiest, brightest, cleanest restaurant we knew. |
|
When I think of the present it appears to be a drama of the absurd. |
|
For understandable reasons we prefer to think of ourselves as rational agents who live meaningful lives rather than as muddled actors in a theatre of the absurd. |
|
While the chicken today might be the least exotic bird one can think of, it was once a gift that wowed kings. |
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He is so innocent but so smart, he warms my heart every time I think of him and I will do my best to make sure all his dreams come true as will his parents. |
|
The judge asks him if he can think of any reason he shouldn't be shipped off to prison and if there's anyone out there who cares about a washed-up has-been. |
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I think of Gail and, at once, as painful ache in my chest materialises. |
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They think of him as a quisling, a nuisance and a dangerous acquaintance. |
|
Like most seven-year-olds, Joe can think of a zillion things to do with his time other than the three Rs, which I assume are still being taught in school. |
|
Here, in a different hemisphere, the acrid smell of firework smoke makes me think of cold nights, short days, cuddling up inside next to the heater. |
|
What did you think of the fistfight sequence between cooper and Mann on the second planet? |
|
Come to think of it, I would also avoid acrylic for a bedspread, after all, all that work means heirloom and it should had been done in a much better yarn. |
|
Today, when we think of telegraphs we think of electric telegraphs, we think of wires and Morse code and dots and dashes and telegrams and that sort of thing. |
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In person he is gentle and friendly, and wouldn't think of putting you on. |
|
I can't think of any occasion when this argument was put up before. |
|
Our existing bulbs tend to work, and we are not yet conditioned to think of them as capital investments. |
|
Aintree hosts one of the most famous jumps meetings in the world but many of the women of Merseyside seem to think of it more as an all-weather event. |
|
I think of myself a political moderate, but the callousness and the rank inefficiency of much of the current Republican party leadership leaves a very bad taste in my mouth. |
|
Is it too corny to think of Bailey capturing love with the click of a shutter? |
|
I cannot think of anybody else I would rather have as chief bridesmaid. |
|
Its whiteness shocks me like a cameras flash and will be the first thing Ill think of when, within months, John tells me that his father has left for another woman. |
|
Every few minutes I think of Cuba about to be ravaged by Hurrican Ivan. |
|
Just think of how much pain and aggravation a simple cold sore causes you. |
|
When you think of the disruption at the Canadian and Mexican borders, not being able to get airfreight into the country, what these guys did was just incredible. |
|
If you think of kimonos or school uniforms when you think of Japanese fashion, you're missing out on the best and most flamboyant outfits that Japan has to offer the world. |
|
In fact, even today, decades away from childhood, I can think of quite a few people whom I wouldn't mind sacrificing at the altar of wizardry and magic. |
|
|
I cannot help but think of the political and ideological interests that have defiled the city. |
|
This may have excellent wonky credentials, or it may be one of those silly policy proposals that people only talk about because they can't think of anything that would work. |
|
We hope they think of that when they do the Spring '04 redesign. |
|
When I think of what these young farmers are paid for working to produce a quality food and what these people who dream up the daft adverts are paid, words fail me. |
|
In Limbo, a marooned family on an island discover the diaries of those stranded there a hundred years before and start to think of themselves as re-enacting their experience. |
|
Though we think of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World as a single list today, there were actually a number of lists compiled by different Greek writers. |
|
On her view, such integration would help both architects and philosophers think of space in dynamic and creative, rather than static and worn-out ways. |
|
We can't be worriting about what people in other countries think of us! |
|
They did not think of liberty, and armies, and the sacredness of democracy. |
|
When I think of the many rape victims who never come forward, who have been silenced in the same fashion, I am saddened. |
|
While most people think of lacquerware as being limited to tiny boxes and little animals, you can also find larger pieces, even full-size room dividers from Vietnam. |
|
And don't even mention what Yorkshiremen think of Lancastrians! |
|
And look, call me self-centered, but I can think of one minority they could start with. |
|
Many people think of religion in personal terms, of the solace or insight or exaltation it can provide. |
|
Of course, it's not exactly hard to find billionaires who think of themselves as altruists regardless of the obscene amounts of wealth they accumulate. |
|
I guess in a way you could think of Dante as the poor man's Tim Burton. |
|
Politicians in Washington may think of slaughter in semiotic terms, but the people on the ground never do. |
|
I think of telling him that I would divorce the wife, send the kids to an orphanage, fire the amah, sell the apartment, and rent a flat in Sheung Wan. |
|
Well you'd better think of something because middle-aged tramps aren't cute, they're pathetic. |
|
It can be a hard job, constantly on your feet, trying to think of things to say to lure people into the store you are spruiking for. |
|
|
The procedure for constructing an Ishikawa diagram relies on brainstorming for stimulating the QI team to think of reasons for the problem. |
|
Hyena biologists often think of spotted hyenas as baboons with big teeth and relatively small brains. |
|
Listen, honeybunch, I don't want to be cruel, but you've got to think of everything. |
|
Here's something else for those of you who think of Neanderthals as submoronic cartoon characters. |
|
This half-embrace of failure, as Coward suggests, is something the British like to think of as distinctly British. |
|
He learns to call his beloved bubeleh and think of Sam Finkler as a yutz, a groisser putt. |
|
Such was Walpole's love of Scott that he liked to think of himself as the latter's reincarnation. |
|
Next to alphabetizing credit-card receipts, I can't think of a more boring job. |
|
A lot of the students who left luggage tags said they found it really easy to think of someone they wanted to thank or say something nice about. |
|
For some random reason, I think of the doctor at the Eye Guy holding those giganto clicky circles over my eyes when I needed new glasses. |
|
My trustees are going to lend Earl Blessington sixty thousand pounds on a Dublin mortgage. Only think of my becoming an Irish absentee! |
|
Though you don't have to think of a theme, having one can help you stay focused. |
|
I can't think of a week that goes by when I don't use Allen wrenches to tinker with something bow related. |
|
It appalls me to think of the way those children have been treated. |
|
I cannot think of any good examples off the top of my head, but give me a couple of hours and I'm sure I could come up with something. |
|
It was a good date but the food at the restaurant was so flabbergastingly excellent I could barely think of anything else to talk about. |
|
I don't know about you, but I can think of many things that this huge wodge of money would be far better spent on. |
|
He accepted, though confiding to his diary that he could not think of a good novelist since Walter Scott who had done so. |
|
Just think of the scene in the restaurant between Bobbie and Don. |
|
Did you still think of your ceiling at that point as cinematographer? |
|
|
When you think of a donkey, the first thing that comes to mind is big ears, a comical, rusty, door-hinge bray, and a short whiskbroom tail. |
|
It is tempting to think of him as the next American president. |
|
Before she had time to think of a retort, Linda saw Tania beckoning her. |
|
The group revealed they think of it like war paint and have always applied it themselves. |
|
Weber was also influenced by Kantian ethics, which he nonetheless came to think of as obsolete in a modern age lacking in religious certainties. |
|
If that was really insulting, please don't be offended. I certainly don't think of you as my errand-ghost. Actually, I think of you as my friend. |
|
Noise is to sonic art what abstract painting is to visual art, so it's probably fair to think of it as abstract music. |
|
Come to think of it, it was more Great White than barracuda. |
|
And whether you think of those little cans as intellectual puzzles or reliquaries or scams, there are surprises inside. |
|
One should think of this Italian innovation not as a method, but as a mere approccio, if we can borrow back a loan word. |
|
Some think of themselves as demisexual, only able to feel attraction when a very strong emotional bond already exists. |
|
And he shuddered to think of the legal standing of such recordings, made without the knowledge or permission of the recordees. |
|
The first type is of course the dry spell when you can't think of any ideas. The second type is when kids just have a dry spell in writing. |
|
I think many people think of asteroids as kind of little chips of rock. But the places that Dawn is going to really are more like worlds. |
|
There long had been a bias among researchers to think of the evolution of sexual dichromatism as driven by changes in male coloration. |
|
They came up with a workable solution, until they could think of something better. |
|
He called him everything he could think of, and this was a great deal, for Sammy has a wicked tongue. |
|
This world, after all our science and sciences, is still a miracle wonderful, inscrutable, magical and more, to whosoever will think of it. |
|
I have read it, to my sorrow, and it would be to his if I had time to say what I think of this silly book. |
|
As a result, many scholars think of turnout as habitual behavior that can be learned or unlearned, especially among young adults. |
|
|
Markus inferred that the aschematic women were just as likely to think of themselves as being independent as dependent. |
|
Some critics of representative democracy think of the United States as an oligarchy. |
|
And who wouldn't like to think of the Dagwood sandwich somewhere on the White House menu? |
|
I hope that it will disorientate the viewer and make one think of other places. |
|
Place made me think of that I suppose. All tarred with the same brush Wiping pens in their stockings. |
|
The best way to understand why Danny Garcia is so good is to think of him and his skillset in terms of the talent stack. |
|
I'm a musicaholic. Losing my hearing is one of the worst things I can think of. I'd have a lot of trouble living in a world without sound. |
|
Funny sort of name. Who would think of calling a little newborn baby Muriel? |
|
Sherlock and Cumbermania may cause women to go mad, but what do the guys think of it all? |
|
Since electrons are negatively charged, it is also helpful to think of this as reduction in electrical charge. |
|
He could think of her being there, without a lurking misgiving that it would have been better if she had not come. |
|
The process whereby the indigenous population of 'Wales' came to think of themselves as Welsh is not clear. |
|
I have been racking my brain all day trying to think of a birthday present for her. |
|
Instead, he had lain awake for hours, knowing he'd made a pig's ear of everything, and trying to think of a way to sort things out. |
|
Come to think of it, I certainly don't envy you all the work involved. Gad, you must be superhuman, or at least superdevoted to crifanac! |
|
Investors have, once again, come to think of them as a supersafe, yet turbocharged, bank account. |
|
There were so few of them that I indeed cannot think of a single one south of the Thames when I became king. |
|
It is common to think of preborn human life as weak, dependent and helpless. |
|
He was afterwards reduced to great Want, and forced to think of plying in the Streets as a Porter for his Livelihood. |
|
I felt they expected me to say clever things, and I never could think of any till after the party was over. |
|
|
It seems that people think of simple ways to say things or know them, but I was always taking the long way around. |
|
You are such a lusty lewdster, Giles. I sometimes think men think of little else but the ungirding of their loins. |
|
In this connexion we may think of the importance of the Lombards, the Leonardeschi, and the Venetians for contemporary northern painting. |
|
Physicians began to think of the Pill as an excellent means of birth control for young women. |
|
But do you see how even then, when I'm thrusting inside your baby sister's cinnamon ring, all I can do is think of you? |
|
But think of this side hustle as an opportunity to do something you love to do. |
|
We like to think of ourselves as walking face forward into the future, eyes on the prize. |
|
You think this is a personal thing with me? Are you telling me I think of this in terms of a personal pique? |
|
She liked to think of it as a Charlie Brown tree, worthy of pity, not just a plain old ugly tree. |
|
She doesn't think of it as rootlessness, because moving has always involved being closer to friends or family. |
|
Thoreau, too, come to think of it, was, by way of being a prophet, a pioneer in this Emancipation of Man from Bothery. |
|
When in court, it is inadvisable to blurt out the first thing you think of. Instead, take time to construct coherent sentences. |
|
The West would be wise to think of Putin as the devil it knows. |
|
Philologists think of Old Dutch and Old West Low Franconian as being the same language. |
|
Don't be tempted to even think of rotovating before spring, and then only when the soil has been pre-dug before winter. |
|
Even though she didn't think of herself as a seductress, her effect on men showed she was one. |
|
It is plausible to think of it as a lexicalization based on the verb si. |
|
Although you can think of these specialized functions as wrappers around cudaMemcpy, they are well-optimized to transfer both strided and unstrided data. |
|
Valency can be understood at a theoretical or lexicological level, but some prefer to think of the term as a new way of describing complementation phenomena. |
|
It's easy to recall who I hate, but I'm generally pretty friendly, so I can't think of any particularly sleb that I'd like to be friends with more than another. |
|
|
Right, I'd better go and find an emery board. Come to think of it, this nail varnish generally is looking a bit scrotty. I really need to take it all off and start again. |
|
A Greek, and writing in Greek, he seems to take Rome and its history as one of the facts of life. You cannot think of him as either a Romanophobe or a Romanophile. |
|
After all, if we think of the Vatican as a vast and hugely successful multinational corporation, then this interview would appear to be the equivalent of a profits warning. |
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According to Tacitus, the Germanic tribes think of temples as unsuitable habitations for gods, and they do not represent them as idols in human shape. |
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When I think of paper, I think you can tear it up, and the laws are gone. |
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Edgar noticed that Clyde was wearing a necktie with a driblet design. The little figures made him think of paramecia, sinister organisms with gullets and feeding grooves. |
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It is useful, then, to think of a polity as a political community. |
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I think of the redtwig dogwood as more vivid in colder climes. |
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One need only think of various Eastern pantheisms in the Hindu, Buddhist, and Taoist traditions or of the Western pantheisms associated with negative theology. |
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Now that I think of it, I acted the same way when I was his age. |
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We have no specific concept of the noumenon, but think of it merely as whatever the object may be apart from the manner in which our knowledge exhibits it. |
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Psychological questioning showed that nearly two out of three housewives like to think of eggs in terms of food dishes or other nonchicken, nonfarm associations. |
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Most people think of the Klan as the night riders in the South after the Civil War, terrorizing black communities and establishing Jim Crow segregation across the South. |
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Atletico Madrid used every underhand ploy they could think of to win this UEFA Cup tie, from trying to knobble the ref to publishing Bolton's travel details on their website. |
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I think of so many people who are no more, and I pity them. Yet they are not so much to be pitied, for they have solved every problem, beginning with the problem of death. |
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They claimed it would make labouring classes 'think' and that these classes would think of their lives as dissatisfying and possibly encourage them to revolt. |
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Survey data suggest that most Irish people think highly of Irish as a symbolic marker of identity, but that few think of it as having a practical value. |
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At this point, the researcher will begin to think of theoretical explanations for the error, often seeking the help of colleagues across different domains of expertise. |
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Without shutting herself up from her family... or lying awake the whole night to indulge meditation, Elinor found every day afforded her leisure enough to think of Edward. |
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I could think of no words adequate to the occasion. So I belched. Not out of contumely, you understand. It was a sympathetic belch, a belch of brotherhood. |
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But you might not immediately think of Dorothy Gale's clicky, glittery red shoes, which though bright, have cast a more subtle shadow over the world of fashion. |
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Do you mind if I talk? It helps me keep the wolf from the door, so to speak. Jill, what do you think of the pedestrianization of Norwich city centre? |
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Do I look so terrible old, Gilian, that you cannot think of me as not so bad-looking either, with a bonny eye, they said, and a jimp waist, and a foot like the honey-bee? |
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On some of the richest days, when a moose stalks by or a bear is blueberrying or munching hazelnuts outside, I think of my house as a bathysphere suspended in the wilderness. |
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And the food! I mean, I'm not fussy, but couldn't they think of anything better than this toothpaste? A little Jello or something, a nice can of soup. |
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The first thing you'd think of would be to take a lawn chair, attach over 100 helium balloons to it and see if you could take off and land at said festival, right? |
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Put down the first thing you think of on this piece of paper. |
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I can think of no good reason to use blink because blinking text and images are annoying, they mark the creator as an amateur, and they have poor browser support. |
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Come to think of it, people in Dublin 4 don't fight, they just altercate. |
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For a behavioral test of what the fish themselves think of the color, Michiels and his colleagues turned to a fairy wrasse species with strong, deep red fluorescence. |
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Today we are apt to think of a fair as a mileless potpourri of trylons and flood-lighted futuramas, but in the yesterdays of our greatgrandfathers, a fair meant a cattle show. |
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I can think of no more welcome sight than two strapping great lads in shorts and woggles knocking at my door, offering to take over the menial tasks. |
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The Sanderson Farms is staged in Kaufman's neck of the woods and it is difficult to think of a reason why the Alabama slammer will not perform well. |
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You know, all my energy is so adrenalized, I canAAEt think of anything else but putting together my next world tour, and the ideas are flowing and the wheels are in motion. |
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What can I say, or think of this most terrible of fatalities? |
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Well after the pile of ego-boo I got in the Oct. issue I just couldn't let it slip by without telling you what I think of this much heralded issue. |
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One way to understand American missionaries' religious-ethical rigorism is to think of it in relation to their desire to ensure the purity of the church. |
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When he couldn't think of any more good lies, he just dummied up. |
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Can't you yard apes think of anything original to cry about? |
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Americans think of guineas as barnyard birds, but they're descendants of wild African birds, just as our chickens are descended from Asian jungle fowl. |
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