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31 Sentences With "imagines to be"

How to use imagines to be in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "imagines to be" and check conjugation/comparative form for "imagines to be". Mastering all the usages of "imagines to be" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This hacker he imagines to be a human — "probably a skinny white boy who's short," he said.
Instead, he lectures an intended audience that he clearly imagines to be mostly white and mostly academic.
The Gorbachev whom Herzog encounters is 88, nearing what he imagines to be the end of his life.
In the first episode, Lou explains his reasoning to an empty theater, which he imagines to be populated by his future cast.
Basically, what he imagines to be facts are things he thinks he heard somewhere, maybe on Fox News, and can't be bothered to check.
He's used what he imagines to be pro-life rhetoric, and he's promised to appoint conservative Supreme Court justices who'd overturn Roe v. Wade.
" House Speaker Paul Ryan said, in what one imagines to be a very serious voice, "The president must appreciate that Russia is not our ally.
Deputy president William Ruto, Kenyatta's running mate sought on Saturday to declare victory and discount the opposition: "Evidently it doesn't matter how powerful/popular one or their party imagines to be, the repeat elections confirm the PEOPLE ARE SUPREME," he tweeted.
The play is essentially a coming-out story in which two characters come to realize, acknowledge, and act on their queer desire for each other, while the other characters model what the writer,  Dr. Herukhuti, imagines to be their friends' likely responses to bisexuality: confusion, shock, revulsion, and loving comprehension and acceptance.
Then there is the petty vulgarity that causes Mr. Trump to trot out, whenever these questions are raised, what he no doubt imagines to be the sledgehammer argument of his daughter, son-in-law and their wonderful children -- in addition, of course, to his "Jewish friends:" Always, in the United States as in France, the same old story and bad excuse.
Again looking for love, this is his last and perhaps only chance to rid himself of what he imagines to be his father's haunting disapproval.
Reviews, p. 6. It tells the story of a German composer inspired by a young woman whom he imagines to be Saint Cecilia. He also wrote many song lyrics.
Dawood confesses that the ruby is lost and it whereabouts is unknown. It's revealed that the ruby was swallowed by Appendix Pappy. On being asked whether he knows where his next posting is, Dawood imagines to be posted in Pakistan facing Dawood Ibrahim, the underworld don.
A Thesaurus is what Piglet imagines to be a large reptilian creature in a similar way to how the characters imagined Heffalumps and other creatures in the original books. Even after Piglet learns what the word "thesaurus" means, he still imagines it to be an animal.
In his dream, the Great Hall tells him to go to the Two Towers, and he disappears. His friends report him to the police while concealing their trip into the caverns. They and police investigators suspect he is deceased. Robbie travels to New York City, where he stabs a mugger whom he imagines to be a monster.
British agent in the SIS. He is vain, somewhat incompetent, and extremely annoying. He admires the Major, whom he imagines to be the type of glamorous playboy spy Lawrence himself aspires to be, but dislikes Eroica, whom he says is a disgrace to Great Britain. He has black hair combed back with a forelock, and wears suits.
Illustration by Gustave Doré depicting the famous windmill scene, in which the hero fights with windmills, which he imagines to be giants. Quixotism ( or ; adj. quixotic) is impracticality in pursuit of ideals, especially those ideals manifested by rash, lofty and romantic ideas or extravagantly chivalrous action. Merriam-Webster dictionary definition of quixotic It also serves to describe an idealism without regard to practicality.
The fellow, enraged, throws himself upon the clothes-rack, which he imagines to be a person, struggles with it and rolls upon the floor, entangled among all his clothes. He restores everything to its former place, but his boots began to dance about the room. The poor drunk man chases after them, but the boots ascend the wall and disappear in the ceiling. Tired he goes to bed.
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club writes that "Scully's sympathy for a mother that she imagines to be persecuted is turned violently on its head, to reveal a monster whose priorities are not quite so straightforward." The episode is also one of the first to explore Scully's desire to become a mother. Booker states that the episode presents the dual nature of Scully's "modern desire for motherhood", as opposed to Mrs.
They live on opposite coasts, communicate mainly by telephone, and use their computers to transact business over the telephone." In 1984, John Gordon delivered his famous "After Dinner Speech" about Alice and Bob, which he imagines to be the first "definitive biography of Alice and Bob." In addition to adding backstories and personalities to Alice and Bob, authors soon added other characters, with their own personalities. The first to be added was Eve, the "eavesdropper.
Upon seeing Carina's diary, he realizes she is his daughter. However, he chooses not to tell her of her true parentage in order to allow her to keep her idealized picture of her father, whom she imagines to be an astronomer. When they reach the island where the Trident of Poseidon is located, a fight between them and Salazar ensues, which later continues on the bottom of the ocean. Barbossa has himself lowered down with the ship's anchor to rescue Jack, Henry, and Carina.
At one point in Act I, he recalls keeping watch at night for the arrival of death, which he imagines to be an anthropomorphic entity. The character who supplies Cain with knowledge of death is Lucifer. In Act II, Lucifer leads Cain on a voyage to the "Abyss of Space" and shows him a catastrophic vision of the Earth's natural history, complete with spirits of extinct life forms like the mammoth. Cain returns to Earth in Act III, depressed by this vision of universal death.
In Time After Time, H.G. Wells invents a time machine and shows it to some friends in a manner similar to the first part of the novella. He does not know that one of his friends is Jack The Ripper. The Ripper, fleeing police, escapes to the future (1979), but without a key which prevents the machine from remaining in the future. When it does return home, Wells follows him in order to protect the future (which he imagines to be a utopia) from the Ripper.
Here he conceives Saint Grobian, whom he imagines to be the patron saint of vulgar and coarse people. Woodcut from Das Narrenschiff Most of Brant's important writing, including many works on civil and canon law, were written while he was living in Basel. He returned to Strasbourg in 1500, where he was made syndic and remained for the rest of his life. In 1503 he secured the influential position of chancellor (stadtschreiber) and his engagement in public affairs prevented him from pursuing literature further.
But she has not forgotten her mysterious benefactor, whom she imagines to be rich and handsome: when an elegant man enters the shop she wonders for a moment if "he" has returned. The Tramp happens by the shop, where the girl is arranging flowers in the window. He stoops to retrieve a flower discarded in the gutter. After a brief skirmish with his old nemeses, the newsboys, he turns to the shop's window through which he suddenly sees the girl, who has been watching him without (of course) knowing who he is.
Gazdanov's first novel — An Evening with Claire (1930) — won accolades from Maxim Gorky and Vladislav Khodasevich, who noted his indebtedness to Marcel Proust. In Black Swans, a 1930 short story, the protagonist commits suicide because he has no opportunity of moving to Australia, which he imagines to be an idealised paradise of graceful black swans. On the strength of his first short stories, Gazdanov was described by critics as one of the most gifted writers to begin his career in emigration. Gazdanov's mature work was produced after World War II. He tried to write in a new genre metaphysical thrillers.
D takes the narrator to various places where D had previously enjoyed himself, as well as sending him to inform D's former girlfriend that he will no longer see her. Matters reach a crisis when a pack of dogs (of which Aghwee is said to be afraid) comes across D and the narrator while D is talking to Aghwee. However it is the narrator who panics until he feels a hand on his shoulder, "gentle as the essence of all gentleness"Aghwee p. 253. which he says he knows to be the D's but imagines to be Aghwee's.
The aurelian is Paul Pilgram, an entomologist and butterfly dealer who never left his native Berlin. His life is empty and dreary, his business dismal, and his marriage perfunctory. His dream has been to venture out on a collecting trip abroad, but lack of resources or interfering circumstances never allowed this to happen. He imagines to be in butterfly places such as Digne in France, Ragusa in Dalmatia, Sarepta in Russia, or Abisko in Lapland, or even catching them in the tropics, or following the lead of Father Dejean (a French missionary who worked in East Tibet Investigation by Dieter E. Zimmer about Father Dejean).
Claudia Webb of the London Financial Times stated: "The one element that separates them is money." While the protagonists share a closer relationship than many servants and masters in India, Sera looks down upon Bhima and refuses to let her sit on a chair in her house or drink from the same glass. Ligaya Mishan of The New York Times saw a parallel in Sera's "mother-in-law's superstition and her physical aversion to Bhima, whom she imagines to be covered in a 'sheen of dirtiness.'" Additionally, Umrigar explored the strength of friendship among the characters, which the class system and its bias threaten.
It follows that, if the defendant is voluntarily drunk and kills in what he mistakenly imagines to be self-defence because he imagines (as in Hatton) that the deceased was attacking him with a sword, he has no defence to a charge of murder; but if he claims to be so intoxicated that he is experiencing hallucinations and imagines that he is fighting giant snakes (as in Lipman)R v Lipman (1969) 3 AER 410 then he can be guilty only of manslaughter. The House of Commons Library compiled a list of people who have acted in self-defence as part of its briefing on the Criminal Law (Amendment) (Householder Protection) Bill 2005.
The books consists of a prologue, 112 brief satires, and an epilogue, all illustrated with woodcuts.W Gillis, trans, The Ship of Fools, (1971) Brant takes up the ship of fools trope, popular at the time, lashing with unsparing vigour the weaknesses and vices of his time. Here he conceives Saint Grobian, whom he imagines to be the patron saint of vulgar and coarse people. The concept of foolishness was a frequently used trope in the pre-Reformation period to legitimise criticism, as also used by Erasmus in his Praise of Folly and Martin Luther in his "An den christlichen Adel deutscher Nation von des christlichen Standes Besserung" (Address to the Christian Nobility).

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