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55 Sentences With "imagine to be"

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

It looked like what we could only imagine to be unicorn snot.
Imagine, to be disappeared even under the protection of your own consular officials.
What else can we close our eyes and imagine to be real in that ring?
My dad doesn't fit the profile of who you might imagine to be Trump's typical voter.
Dreams of paradise leave us comparing where we are with something we imagine to be vastly better.
Or what do you imagine to be the problem, because everyone talks about these pipeline issues constantly. Yes.
" He added, "PS they officially declared Imagine to be a Lennon/Ono song and gave my mother a second award!
Many industries that you might imagine to be directly in the crosshairs of Silicon Valley are expected to plod along happily.
I turned around and saw what I can only imagine to be the high-school version of Steph, giggling and silly.
Yet Hardwick managed to do all this as a woman writer in what we imagine to be a harder time for them.
It would be frustrating, I imagine, to be in a rush and also be stuck in an Uber that moves at a glacial pace.
Because at least you can make choices based on what you know to be true about yourself rather than what you imagine to be true.
His left arm is meanwhile thrust out at an exact ninety-degree angle from his right, forming what I imagine to be an exemplary semaphore-stance.
As I was watching it I was realizing that with a lot of these artists, their artwork reflects what they imagine to be a be a better world.
While he took some breaks in between trips, other times he filmed episodes back-to-back in what one can only imagine to be an exhausting, brutal process.
As the evening slowly progresses, Burkett starts to recount what I imagine to be just a taste of how food has become an important aspect of his daily life.
It wasn't the most convenient set up, in part because Canlis has what I imagine to be one of the worst spots in Seattle for a drive-thru restaurant.
That's a failure to maintain critical distance, but it's being projected onto an audience that critics imagine to be more suggestible than themselves — insanely more suggestible, almost comically so.
Nick Offerman is perhaps best known as the beloved Ron Swanson in Parks and Recreation, who is pretty much the last person you'd ever imagine to be a great breakdancer.
I chose the Waverly Inn, a celeb-friendly West Village establishment that serves up cozy vibes and has the decor of (what I imagine to be) Taylor's rustic Tribeca penthouse.
But that would likely pose a free-speech issue for Facebook and Instagram to deal with, which I imagine to be the reason it's passing the controls to users instead.
What would you imagine to be the Chief Justice's reaction if I were to tell him, 'could you have special courts, night courts, in order to clear all these cases?
The romantic tableau of the gay man and "the last black man" is supposed to make us long for something that we imagine to be increasingly endangered: an authentic San Francisco.
"In lieu of a cake, we presented a plate full of an envelope of what we imagine to be their favorite thoughts, such as, 'Textures' and 'Vera Farmiga,'" the artists said.
In others, I see rays of light as if seen from underwater; the slow drip of liquid gold; strange, bobbing jellyfish; and what I imagine to be the breath of spirits.
Peter is what I imagine to be the perfect suburban high school boyfriend—a handsome guy who looks like he works at Lids and would buy you a bread bowl at Panera.
We used braiding rituals and hair techniques as sort of an entry point, and our virtual reality tells the story of who we imagine to be the creator of these Octavia Electrodes.
STEWART: What I think about Hillary Clinton is, you know, I imagine to be a very bright woman without the courage of her convictions because I'm not even sure what they are.
Keepin' It Casual These pants are what we imagine to be a happy accident while dyeing or painting, a byproduct of living on the edge and wearing white while doing something crafty.
She was regressed to a lifetime in which she was an Aztec woman, which I imagine to be a hell of a lot like a mashup between Scorsese's Kundun and Gibson's Apocalypto.
Some white supremacists have been drawn to classical studies out of a desire to affirm what they imagine to be an unblemished lineage of white Western culture extending back to ancient Greece.
From silver to lilac to blue and now an even mix of the three, Gaga has officially gone through what a lot of us imagine to be hair-color hell (oy, the breakage).
They were all luxurious aromas that I imagine to be what Diane Keaton smells like, but none of them satisfied me as much as a strong whiff of Bath & Body Works' mahogany teakwood.
And he wrote another about a cynical, power-grubbing king scared witless that he isn't a legitimate ruler — who turns out, in a twist only Shakespeare could imagine, to be the president's distant cousin.
It stars Southern Gothic novelist and short story writer Flannery O'Connor — who died in 1964, and who, given her hermetic reputation, would be the very last person you would ever imagine to be on Instagram.
"And there were comings and goings of who I imagine to be cousins, aunts, nephews… all day, until 10 PM." The Bataclan reopened for concerts on November 12, 2016, the night before the one-year anniversary of the attacks.
And they so exoticize those people they imagine to be pulling the levers behind the scenes that they strip away those people's claims to citizenship and perhaps also to humanity, raising the specter of due process violations if not grave atrocities.
"So I do imagine, to be a brown-skinned girl of any race throughout the world, looking up on that screen and seeing Storm, I think that is a capital A, capital W, E, some, AWESOME, experience," she added by phone.
Hell, it's not even the first time a Grammy winner has tried to share their honor with a nominee they imagine to be more deserving, as Macklemore when he tried to share his Best Rap Artist award with Kendrick Lamar via an Instagram note in 2014.
" On "TLDR (smithing)," he takes pity on someone you imagine to be a banker cast out by the recession: "If you was rich and 'bout to be broke, I can coach you / 'cause I can show you how to kill a roach with a boat shoe.
I also found the "kitchen catwalk" spread — several photos of her strutting in different looks in what I imagine to be a commercial kitchen that doubles as a secret entryway to somewhere fabulous — to be a kind of display of work, the elegance and vim of her outfits juxtaposed against unglamorous obstacles.
As a music critic, it isn't my job to fawn over everything in the manner of a stan on the internet, but what I like about the engagement of the stan is the willingness to be carried away on a wave of something that you imagine to be greater than yourself, even if it isn't.
In an internal memo, President Trump (who has longed believed that the Keebler Elves are living beings producing cookies in America's coniferous forests) wrote the following: The Keebler elves, and their underground society of what i imagine to be easily 500,000, are all staunch leftists, and reluctantly voted for Hillary, despite not technically being American citizens.
The problem (as if there's only one): We don't have data for total U.S. smartphone users under the age of 18, which we imagine to be a key, if not primary, demographic for Pokémon Go. Also, mixing all these different data sources is like comparing apples to oranges to zebras, but this is the best available data only a week after the game was released.
The self-righteous killer destroys the family to exact revenge upon the mother, in an act that he blames on her. Finally, the paranoid killer kills their family in what they imagine to be an attempt to protect them from something even worse.
These rules are usually statements about > English usage which the authors imagine to be, as a rule, true. But > statements of this kind are extremely difficult to formulate both simply and > accurately. They are rarely altogether true; often only partially true; > sometimes contradicted by usage itself. Sometimes the contrary to them is > also true.
Albany New York: State University of New York Press, 2010: 47. Reviews were positive. After Chesnutt read several compliments from friends and in various newspaper reviews, he wrote to editor Walter Hines Page, "taking it all in all, I have had a slight glimpse of what it means, I imagine, to be a successful author." One later review by influential critic William Dean Howells particularly praised Chesnutt.
First is the pretend or the simulation theories, proposed by Kendall Walton in his seminal paper Fearing Fiction (1978) and built upon in subsequent works. The pretend theory denies premise 1, that people have emotional responses to fictitious things. The theory argues that we do not experience real emotions with fiction but rather something less intense. We experience quasi-emotions that we imagine to be real emotions.
Ships immediately capitulate and surrender their wealth rather than be captured, a fate they imagine to be certain death. A pirate operating under his own name is said to be incapable of such infamy: "No one would surrender to the Dread Pirate Westley." The fear inspired by the title is used in Westley's plan of invading the castle right before Buttercup's wedding. In the invasion the giant Fezzik poses as Roberts to inspire fear in the castle guard.
It was there that she took her first drama classes and developed an interest in the profession, noting "theater was the first time I felt like I could open up and be someone I could only imagine to be." There, she also became more exposed to the Asian American culture at large; she also participated in Asian American Association's Fashion Show. She graduated with a degree in psychology in 2007 and spent the following summer on a medical missionary trip in Kenya.
While Cybèle falls asleep, awaiting Pierre for their Christmas together in the snow-covered park's gazebo, the former pilot musters the nerve to climb the 300-foot steeple. With his knife as a tool to unscrew the rooster, he brings it down. As he returns to Cybèle, with the metal rooster and his knife in his hands, the police arrive and shoot him dead to "protect" the child, whom they imagine to be in danger. Cybèle awakens to the horror of seeing that her friend is dead and cries in anguish.
The next day, Ted frantically calls the Yin family to tell them about a large package of whiskey that he sent them as a further apology, but says that there has been a "change of plan". Father Jack then emerges from the box in an SS uniform, having drunk all of the liquor. In the book Father Ted: The Complete Scripts, Arthur Mathews observes that the islanders' actions in this episode are the opposite of those in "The Passion of Saint Tibulus": in the earlier episode, they completely fail to do what Ted wants them to, while in this episode they enthusiastically follow what they imagine to be Ted's example, even though he desperately wants them not to.
V&A; image This small painting, which more closely approaches a Pre-Raphaelite landscape style, shows a half- harvested cornfield, with tools and jugs of the farm-workers piled up beside a corn stook. But the only figures visible are two clearly middle-class women, no doubt part of the same party as the artist, one sitting against a stook reading a book, and the other walking with a parasol. Any georgic or realist focus on agriculture is absent "his cornfield is just part of a landscape where middle-class people take their leisure. The corn is no more or no less useful than the beaches which we imagine to be in the distance of this brilliantly coloured painting".
Authors Ben Urish and Ken Bielen describe "My Mummy's Dead" as "brief but powerful," stating that it produces a "memorable and chilling" effect and appropriately ends John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band by "capturing the essence of psychological pain and intimating at its persistence." Blaney finds the song to be "a concise expression of Lennon's primal experience." Music critic Wilfrid Mellers describes it as a "sickening cross between nursery rhyme...and TV commercial jingle" that takes us back to childhood in a "disabused and disillusioned" fashion. Mellers sees Lennon's later song "Oh Yoko!" from the Imagine to be a "positive counterpart" to "My Mummy's Dead," being addressed to his wife Yoko Ono rather than his mother.
"And whenever any one informs us that he has found a man who knows all the arts, and all things else that anybody knows, and every single thing with a higher degree of accuracy than any other man—whoever tells us this, I think that we can only imagine to be a simple creature who is likely to have been deceived by some wizard or actor whom he met, and whom he thought all-knowing, because he himself was unable to analyze the nature of knowledge and ignorance and imitation."The Republic, Book X "And the same object appears straight when looked at out of the water, and crooked when in the water; and the concave becomes convex, owing to the illusion about colours to which the sight is liable. Thus every sort of confusion is revealed within us; and this is that weakness of the human mind on which the art of conjuring and deceiving by light and shadow and other ingenous devices imposes, having an effect upon us like magic." He speaks about illusions and confusion.

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