Example sentences of "think [pron] [be] talking " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I think I am talking for us all when I say that we will gladly work for nothing , just until matters improve , we have all been so happy here at Summer Lodge and each and every one of us would like to stay with you wherever you go . ’
2 Of course , they 'd immediately jump to the wrong conclusion and think I was talking about a girlfriend , and I 'd get some almighty teasing , but the joke was on them !
3 I 'm I think I 'm talking about the words first of all .
4 So I think I 've I mean you put me right , but I think I 'm talking about the words , rather than the essential message .
5 " I do n't often agree with what this aggravating old fool says , but this time I think she 's talking sense . "
6 Well I 'm certain that if you looked at every post in the City we could certainly save one or two , I do n't think anyone would deny that , but the sort of cases that Queenie 's just been talking about , I think she 's talking absolute nonsense .
7 ‘ I think you 're talking over 40,000 spectators and a gross of close to £10 million .
8 S I think you 're talking shite you know mate .
9 I think we 're talking about anorexia here , are n't we ?
10 ‘ Up ’ ( and I think we 're talking more than the one level of ambiguity in that solitary two-letter word ) is a record that actually makes you feel happy , in that all of it is uplifting ( oi ! spiritually , not trouserly ) , you can dance to some of it and sing along to the rest , the words are rude and witty and always smart , and Richard Fairbrass is a fantastic pop singer , all post-Bowie and Ferry and languid , a sort of brightly-coloured Neil Tennant .
11 It may be that this explanation is not an acceptable answer to the question , but it is presented by the speaker in a form which conveys ‘ what I think we 're talking about ’ in this part of the conversation .
12 Characterising the individual speaker 's topic as ‘ what I think we 're talking about ’ incorporates both that element which the conversational analyst tends to abstract as the ‘ topic of conversation ’ for the participants ( 'What we 're talking about' ) and the individual speaker 's version ( 'I think' ) , as he/she makes a conversational contribution .
13 From what we have proposed as speakers ' topics in conversational discourse , it must occasionally happen that there are at least two versions of ‘ What I think we 're talking about ’ which are potentially incompatible .
14 We might characterise speaker B's view of ‘ what I think we 're talking about now ’ as something involving herself , the 1930s , and the existence of telephones ( as well as radios ) at that time .
15 Speaker B's view of ‘ what I think we 're talking about now ’ must now involve speaker A , A's father , the Scouts and a man ( who may have something to do with telephones ) .
16 Looking back to speaker C's third question , we can propose two versions of ‘ what I think we 're talking about ’ .
17 We might think that by the end of this fragment there is once again a single version for both speakers of ‘ what I think we 're talking about ’ .
18 I think we 're talking at cross purposes .
19 I think we 're talking about once the suspension was over
20 I think we 're talking about
21 That 's the sort of unconscious bias that I think we 're talking about where
22 Well , I think we 're talking here about hospitals in particular and not GP practice but we 're also saying that this is something which the enthusiastic and bright and very capable people we have in our health service are very keen on because they believe it will do better for their patients .
23 Miss Taylor , I think everybody is talking about your appearance but I think you 're one of the greatest actresses in the world and I 've enjoyed a lot of your films .
24 And yet they did n't have any signs so I think he 's talking through his hat .
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