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

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1 I am afraid the latter-day Pop artists think of themselves as being a culmination of the expression of cultural realism and they regard what happened in the Sixties as a primitive expression of their more developed ideas , which seems to me far from the truth .
2 What the charity groups think of him is hardly going to make or break him in the operatic world . ’
3 If you lifted a large laundry basket think about the size of a laundry basket , think about where the hands would go then down , lift it up and if it 's full of laundry then it 's obviously going to be heavier than if it was empty but that 's the size .
4 But it does n't have to be exercise with a capital E. Think of it more as activity .
5 The correlations with the various scales give some indication of what types of situation subjects think of as risky , particularly those which require high levels of concentration , feel stressful and make them feel they are not in control .
6 What World markets think of Clinton .
7 As the New World Order think about new uses for the SDI ‘ star wars ’ technology ( in particular the X-ray gun satellite that can evaporate caravans heading north up the A9 ) , some familiar names have been busy .
8 Finally Buckingham MP George Walden is writing to Agriculture Minister John Gummer about the land war crisis , to tell him what local land farmers think about it .
9 Resistance to linguistic change is related to the way people think of language as a fixed point in the flux of experience , and cling to the certainties they feel are embodied in language .
10 As any woman could tell you a change of clothes or hairstyle can instantly change the way people think about you .
11 An archaeologist who has transformed the way people think about his area of study ; a communicator who can make an enthralling TV programme ; a lover of contemporary art who has persuaded the Fellows of his Cambridge college at least to tolerate biannual sculpture shows ( one of which involved digging up the hallowed lawns ) ; and now , since his peerage which gives him the forum of Britain 's Upper House , a politician , with strong views on how to preserve the world 's history as encapsulated in its archaeology : Colin Renfrew at fifty-five has an enviable career and range of interests .
12 This is , without doubt , a book for professionals who are not only thinking about quality , but who want to instill a fundamental change in the way people think about and do their work .
13 The aim of the study is to document and interpret conceptions of health and illness used by doctors and patients and to show how the way people think about their health affects the consultation with the doctor .
14 And before you take out TRAVEL insurance think about improving your HOME insurance .
15 A systematic difference in the life-experience of women and men can have ethical implications both in generating a different moral ideal making women think differently about morality from the way men think about it — and also in justifying a different moral ideal justifying , that is , a genuinely alternative moral perspective .
16 What did his banking colleagues think of his decision ?
17 Is this , all these wonderful protection of animals , dogs and horses and so on , and pet shops and so on , do , does the Chief Fire Officer think in his local knowledge , that most of these have been inspected by his officers , or does he get the feeling there , that sometimes the district councils are not asking for these inspections ?
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