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14 Sentences With "able to think clearly"

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

After a frustrating Mercury retrograde in rigid Taurus, you're finally able to think clearly!
And the thing I have to do for my wife is to be able to think clearly and make good decisions.
I wasn't able to think clearly, and kept feeling like my testimony would never hold up—legally, or to anyone I knew.
Most of those in the control group were now slightly less able to think clearly and remember than they had been six months before, new tests showed.
It is also a political test for whether progressives will be manipulated by knee-jerk suspicions, or be able to think clearly about using the market to serve human needs.
America has rarely been able to think clearly about Iran; not least because the regime's followers held 52 of its citizens hostage for 444 days after seizing the American embassy in Tehran in 1979.
Here are two examples of mental disorders the Joker does not haveSchizophrenia, a severe mental illness that sees individuals experience thought disorder where they are not able to think clearly or logically, delusions where they believe things that aren't true, and negative symptoms like not having the motivation to engage in anything productive.
"It was important to keep composure, keep it going, and I'm just so glad I was able to keep my mind on the game and I was able to think clearly," said Rahm, who is six months younger than Phil Mickelson was when he won the first of his three titles in this tournament in 1993.
Retrieved 14 May 2007. that women were incapable of rational or abstract thought. Women, it was believed, were too susceptible to sensibility and too fragile to be able to think clearly. Wollstonecraft, along with other female reformers such as Catharine Macaulay and Hester Chapone, maintained that women were indeed capable of rational thought and deserved to be educated.
Meeting her at an amusement park, Trevor goes with her son Nicholas on a fun house ride called "Route 666". The ride, originally a harmless scare ride, begins to show increasingly disturbing images for Trevor as it advances, and its flashing lights cause Nicholas to suffer an epileptic seizure. No longer able to think clearly, Trevor suspects that the bizarre events are a concerted effort to drive him insane. These ideas are fed to him in small random clues.
"Defectors Say Church of Scientology Hides Abuse", The New York Times, March 6, 2010. A Clear is defined by the Church of Scientology as person who no longer has a "reactive mind", and is therefore free from the reactive mind's negative effects. A Clear is said to be "at cause over" (that is, in control of) their "mental energy" (their thoughts), and able to think clearly even when faced with the very situations that in earlier times caused them difficulty. The next level of spiritual development is that of an Operating Thetan.
The Dutch underground arranges for a secret room to be built in the Béjé so that the Jews would have a place to hide during an inevitable raid. It is a constant struggle for Corrie to keep the Jews safe; she sacrifices her own safety and part of her own personal room to give constant safety to the Jews. Rolf, a police officer friend, trains her to be able to think clearly anytime for when the Nazis invade her home and start to question her. When a man asks Corrie to help his wife, who had been arrested, Corrie agrees but with misgivings.
Justice Souter believes that having a defendant prove his insanity in order to justify they were unable to clearly think while committing the crime would disprove his claim for insanity because they were able to think clearly to prove they were insane. The court cited the Arizona Supreme Court's decision in State v. Mott, which refused to allow a psychiatric testimony to invalidate a criminal's intent and to uphold that Arizona does not allow evidence of a mental illness to neutralize the mens rea of a crime. Mens Rea is an element of criminal responsibility regarding whether or not there was intention or knowledge of wrongdoing while a crime was being committed.
Because of this, Rutledge felt that the Senate would be better able to think clearly about what the consequences of a bill would be. Also, since the bills could not become law without the consent of the House of Representatives, he concluded that there would be no danger of the Senate ruling the country.Flanders 606 When the proposal was made that only landowners should have the right to vote, Rutledge opposed it perhaps more strongly than any other motion in the entire convention. He stated that making such a rule would divide the people into "haves" and "have nots", would create an undying resentment against landowners, and could do nothing but cause discord.

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