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The phrase "imagine by" is not grammatically correct and is not commonly used in written English.
It is possible that it is a typo or mistake and the intended phrase may be "imagined by" or "imagine, by". Here is an example of how "imagine by" could be used in a sentence: "The new product was imagined by our team of designers and engineers." However, it would be more natural and correct to say "The new product was thought up by our team of designers and engineers."
Exact(58)
One is "Imagine," by John Lennon.
The song was "Imagine," by John Lennon.
I imagine by now you are tired of them.
An army negotiator used a loudspeaker to play "Imagine" by John Lennon.What happened next is disputed.
Theirs is a relentless routine, one made harder, you'd imagine, by the relentless British climate.
She was accompanied, I imagine, by her seventy-year-old father, the noted man of letters Sir Leslie Stephen.
"Imagine" by John Lennon and "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen have also been performed on the prime-time show "American Idol".
"Our preparation has been excellent so far and I imagine by the first Test we will be ready".
His office includes a black-and-white etching of a somber Abraham Lincoln, a framed 45 of "Imagine," by John Lennon and a sculpture of a laughing Buddha.
Similar(2)
His moral and political compass points were set - I well imagine - by the cardinal points of Ronald Blythe's Anglicanism and Colin Ward's anarchism.
In its 1960s pomp, the Tricorn won design awards, but more recently it was voted Britain's fourth ugliest building and denounced - imagine! - by Prince Charles.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com