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32 Sentences With "coming to mind"

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

Are any good names for this company coming to mind?
Kate Bush kept coming to mind as I watched this.
A couple of words kept coming to mind: total annihilation; complete destruction.
But the images of Europe after World War I keep coming to mind.
At that point several possible ideas should start coming to mind, said Miaskiewicz.
"Gatekeeping" is a term that keeps coming to mind when looking at Talmadge's paintings.
At the time, AOL, I'm sure there were others that aren't coming to mind.
The word that kept coming to mind while watching Handmaid's Tale Season 2 was: gratuitous.
And if no one is immediately coming to mind, odds are that person is you.
There are two stories that keep coming to mind when I begin thinking about this show.
Nothing is coming to mind because they're not well-phrased enough for me to remember them.
Ebs Burnough: You know what, I think in terms of punk specifically, nothing is coming to mind.
Now it's almost impossible to think of the space shuttle without the word "disaster" coming to mind.
"The only word coming to mind right now is 'monster,'" Woodcock said, according to The New York Times.
Michael Moore, reviews coordinator: The question that keeps coming to mind after seeing Half-Life: Alyx is: can Valve save VR?
In other news this week, the soprano Julia Bullock — I'm getting tired of calling her radiant, but it keeps coming to mind!
He was about to start another book with another "existential black dude narrator," as he put it, but the Underground Railroad idea kept coming to mind.
Somehow — with the familiar whimsical theme song floating in the air and the memory of Michael Scott's many bumbling moments coming to mind — it seems and feels right.
Norway is known for many things—none of them coming to mind right now—but perhaps most of all its magnificent rock formations, which look great on Instagram.
If you saw the episode, I'm sure one particular neck tendon is coming to mind... Luckily, this was just a vision/premonition and Cordelia is still in the game.
Most headphone companies feel the need to give you a lot of material for your big outlay of cash, with such monsters as the Final Audio D8000 coming to mind.
The one thing that Siri does have going for it, sometimes even though it may seem a little bit, I'm trying to be kind here, but inept keeps coming to mind.
Yet after a recent meeting with airline leadership, Larry Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council, said that "certain sectors of the economy, airlines coming to mind" might require assistance.
The Italian label is known for going the extra mile, with Katy Perry's chandelier look at the Met Gala and that TV dinner dress from fall 2019 immediately coming to mind.
"We're worried about certain sectors of the economy, airlines coming to mind, ... that might need some help," said Larry Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council said in an interview with Bloomberg on Friday.
Thus, if our goal is to reduce the risk of the memory coming to mind, we are better off getting as far away as possible—physically and mentally—from the original event, perhaps by daydreaming about a far-off vacation.
Accentuate the positive If your interviewer really wants to know about your current work situation, you need to find a way to discuss what you have gained from your job, even if that's not what keeps coming to mind as you try to claw your way out.
It's a question that kept coming to mind as I read "My War Criminal: Personal Encounters With an Architect of Genocide," Jessica Stern's mystifying account of her conversations with Radovan Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb leader who was convicted in 2016 of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, and is serving a life sentence in prison at The Hague.
When the old lady tries to feed him again, Gary finds that the old lady most likely has sinister motives—she is possibly trying to fatten and then eat him. He makes his escape, but the old lady chases him out onto the streets. Gary finds an alley snail, which the old lady now mistakes for Miss Tuffsy, and takes him home instead. Back home, SpongeBob gives up on his search for Gary, and tries to forget about him by taking a walk, but his memories keep coming to mind and upsetting him.
The pharmaceutical industry affords some protection from genericization of trade names with the modern practice of assigning a nonproprietary name for a drug based upon chemical structure. Brand-name drugs have well-known nonproprietary names from the beginning of their commercial existence, even while still under patent, preventing the aforementioned problem of "no alternative generic name for the idea readily coming to mind". For example, even when Abilify was new, its nonproprietary name, Aripiprazole, was well documented. Another example is Warfarin, which was known as an ingredient in rat poison before it was approved for human use under the brand name of Coumadin.
The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinction. New York, Simon & Schuster. Their point was that Diamond's work (and that of others) did not fall within the criterion of falsifiability, laid down for science by the philosopher, Karl Popper. A reviewer of the exchanges between the two camps in an issue of Synthese found “images of hand-to-hand combat or a bar-room brawl” coming to mind. The Florida State group suggested a method that they developed, that of “null” models,Gotelli, N. J.; Graves, G. R. (1996), Null Models in Ecology.
Sinclair published fictional novel The Jungle based on what he saw while investigating, which exposed the horrors of the meatpacking industry to the public. Patterson says that the biggest difference between the slaughter of animals today and in the early 1900s is that slaughterhouses have become faster and increased in volume of production, “[a slaughterhouse] today... kills more animals in a single day than all the slaughterhouses in Sinclair's day killed in a year.” Patterson then discusses political artist, Sue Coe's, book Dead Meat about her six years visiting slaughterhouses around the country In her book Coe says that the Holocaust kept coming to mind as she visited the slaughterhouses, “she says she wonders if [the Holocaust] is ‘the comforting measuring rod by which all horrors are evaluated?’” Patterson continues his argument of relating the industrialization of the meat industry to the Holocaust by discussing Henry Ford, “whose impact on the twentieth century began, metaphorically speaking, at an American slaughterhouse and ended at Auschwitz.” In his autobiography, Ford said that his inspiration for assembly-line production came from visiting a Chicago slaughterhouse.

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