Sentence examples for unfamiliar thoughts from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The beholder then has to entertain a galaxy of new and unfamiliar thoughts about the object, redefining it and herself in relation to it.

Similar(59)

It's a comforting, not unfamiliar idea, until this thought: "The stars are bright, but do they know / The universe is beautiful but cold?" Then the song stops being comforting; it reaches for something it doesn't quite understand, and possibly doesn't even want; it becomes ambiguous and mournful.

It is when the assurance of the day-to-day is gone and it becomes tinged with uncertainty that unfamiliar feelings and thoughts become part of their normal day and they notice their own existential uncertainty [ 24].

After 1776 anti-British feelings led some Americans to advocate a fresh legal system, but European laws were diverse, couched in foreign languages having unfamiliar turns of thought, and unavailable in textbook form.

The bodies are beneath the rubble, the last-minute cell-phone calls — remarkably calm and loving, many of them — are still being reported, the sound of an airplane overhead still bears an unfamiliar menace, the thought of boarding an airplane with our old blasé blitheness keeps receding into the past.

Yeats's mythology, from which arises the distilled symbolism of his great period, is not always easy to understand, nor did Yeats intend its full meaning to be immediately apparent to those unfamiliar with his thought and the tradition in which he worked.

The bodies are beneath the rubble, the last-minute cell-phone calls remarkably calm and loving, many of them are still being reported, the sound of an airplane overhead still bears an unfamiliar menace, the thought of boarding an airplane with our old blasé blitheness keeps receding into the past.

I remember thinking a thought not unfamiliar to Winnipeggers: maybe I should just lie down in the snow and give up.

I remember thinking a thought not unfamiliar to Winnipeggers: Maybe I should just lay down in the snow and give up.

A meta-analysis (Amodio and Frith, 2006) suggests that this border region of anterior rostral medial frontal cortex is used particularly when people judge actions or thoughts of unfamiliar others, as opposed to the inferior section of the anterior rostral medial frontal cortex, used when assessing the feelings of familiar others.

Shows a good control of elementary vocabulary but major errors still occur when expressing more complex thoughts or handling unfamiliar topics and situations.

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