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Example sentences for "think much"

  • As to character,' said Tom Staple, 'I don't think much of that.

  • Men, when they are acquiring property, think much of such things, but they who live where their ancestors have lived for years, do not feel the misfortune.

  • They don't think much of either,' said Ethelbert; 'and that perhaps accounts for their superiority.

  • I certainly do say Jeff Campbell, I certainly don't think much of the way you always do it, always never knowing what it is you are ever really wanting and everybody always got to suffer.

  • You remember right, because you don't remember nothing till you get home with your thinking everything all over, but I certainly don't think much ever of that kind of way of remembering right, Jeff Campbell.

  • And so Jeff Campbell and Melanctha Herbert sat there on the steps, very quiet, a long time, and they didn't seem to think much, that they were together.

  • I am certainly afraid I don't think much of your kind of feeling Dr.

  • I don't think much of any of the Carburys, Mrs Pipkin.

  • We don't think much of the South Central here now,' said Paul.

  • I can tell you nobody else will think much of you if you remain here.

  • Wherefore, since the magnanimous man does not think much of external goods, that is goods of fortune, he is neither much uplifted by them if he has them, nor much cast down by their loss.

  • Accordingly magnanimity is about honors in the sense that a man strives to do what is deserving of honor, yet not so as to think much of the honor accorded by man.

  • Accordingly we ought to think much of the goods of others, in such a way as not to disparage those we have received ourselves, because if we did they would give us sorrow.

  • I don't think much of the man for allowing it.

  • Hum, can't say I think much of your argument, Graeme.

  • If he saw the inside of them, how short they are, I don't think he'd think much of you as a lover nor yet as an Under-Secretary.

  • Phineas was too much occupied with his own horse to think much of that on which Lord Chiltern was mounted.

  • I don't think much of that young man," said Ratler.

  • As to character," said Tom Staple, "I don't think much of that.

  • They don't think much of either," said Ethelbert, "and that perhaps accounts for their superiority.

  • Men, when they are acquiring property, think much of such things, but they who live where their ancestors have lived for years do not feel the misfortune.

  • I don't think much of our profession, but, contrasted with respectability, it is comparatively honest.

  • Candidly, my friend, I don't think much of your plot!

  • Your friend Jack Brien didn't seem to think much of the place,' said Dick.

  • Accustomed to think much of things, it was thus that he thought of her in reference to the world to come.

  • In his state of mind, as it then was, he was by no means disposed to think much of the injustice done to him.

  • Then you don't think much of my chances of that--three hundred?

  • I didn't think much of them myself, nor do I now.

  • I've sown the seed, it's for you to reap the flower; and recollect that they'll think much more of you when you order six suits than when you pay for one.

  • I don't think much of marrying for money.

  • Papa does not seem to think much of it," said Mrs. Orme.

  • And I always was, even when I didn't seem to think much about it;--always.

  • But Felix Graham was a man who could not bring himself to think much of such things on the spur of the moment, and when he was introduced to Sophia, he did not seem to be taken with her in any wonderful way.

  • Everybody seemed to assume now that he at any rate didn't think much of it, and he had never claimed his real right up to that time of asserting his innocence.

  • Ay, we think much to tarry five minutes for God, though He may have waited fifty years for us.

  • You seem to think little of those things whereof I have been taught to think much; and to think much of those things whereof I have been led to think little.

  • My party won’t think much of me unless I act an independent part, and there’s a good many of us; we wish to have a bit of a literary man.

  • Then, you don’t think much of our leaders?

  • If a lawyer can’t talk we don’t think much of him or his law, and then there is another reason.

  • You don't think much of my chances of success.

  • Well, I don't think much of her drawing-room.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "think much" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    after receiving; been written; clean saucepan; flung myself; microwave radio relay international; never again; public enemy; steps were; tail long; think more; think much; think proper; think seriously; think shame; think slavery; think the; think they; think things; think thou; think when; thinking about; thinking being; thinking what; thinks himself; thinks proper; year terms