AGREE vs THINK: NOUN
- N/A
- A thinking; thought.
- The act or an instance of deliberate or extended thinking; a meditation.
- An instance of deliberate thinking
AGREE vs THINK: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Requiring much thought to create or assimilate.
AGREE vs THINK: VERB
- To consent to a contract or to an element of a contract.
- To correspond to in gender, number, case, or person.
- To yield assent to; to approve.
- Be compatible, similar or consistent; coincide in their characteristics
- Go together
- Achieve harmony of opinion, feeling, or purpose
- Be in accord; be in agreement
- Consent or assent to a condition, or agree to do something
- Show grammatical agreement
- Be agreeable or suitable
- Recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection
- Have in mind as a purpose
- Imagine or visualize
- Decide by pondering, reasoning, or reflecting
- Ponder; reflect on, or reason about
- Focus one's attention on a certain state
- Dispose the mind in a certain way
- Judge or regard; look upon; judge
- Expect, believe, or suppose
- Have or formulate in the mind
- Use or exercise the mind or one's power of reason in order to make inferences, decisions, or arrive at a solution or judgments
- Be capable of conscious thought
- Bring into a given condition by mental preoccupation
AGREE vs THINK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To suit or be adapted in its effects; to do well.
- To be conformable; to resemble; to coincide; to correspond
- To make a stipulation by way of settling differences or determining a price; to exchange promises; to come to terms or to a common resolve; to promise.
- To yield assent; to accede; -- followed by to.
- To harmonize in opinion, statement, or action; to be in unison or concord; to be or become united or consistent; to concur.
- To grant or concede.
- To share an opinion about (something).
- To correspond in gender, number, case, or person.
- To be suitable, appropriate, pleasing, or healthful.
- To be compatible or consistent: : correspond.
- To come to an understanding or agreement, as by negotiating.
- To accept or support a policy or program.
- To express consent; concur: : assent.
- To share an opinion or feeling; be in accord.
- To use the mind in a certain way.
- To have care or consideration.
- To have a belief, supposition, or opinion.
- To recall a thought or an image to mind.
- To bring a thought to mind by using the imagination.
- To consider or weigh an idea.
- To exercise the power of reason, as by conceiving ideas, drawing inferences, and using judgment.
- To concentrate one's thoughts on; keep as a point of focus.
- To devise or evolve; invent.
- To visualize; imagine.
- To call to mind; remember.
- To intend.
- To expect; hope.
- To believe; suppose.
- To judge or regard; look upon.
- To decide by reasoning, reflection, or pondering.
- To reason about or reflect on; ponder.
- To have or formulate in the mind.
AGREE vs THINK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To admit, or come to one mind concerning; to settle; to arrange
- To make harmonious; to reconcile or make friends.
- N/A
AGREE vs THINK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Be in agreement
- Be in accord
- To agree with; suit.
- To settle; determine; arrange.
- In grammar, to correspond in number, case, gender, or person: as, a verb must agree with its subject.
- To suit; be accommodated or adapted: as, the same food does not agree with every constitution.
- To resemble; be similar; be applicable or appropriate; tally; match; correspond; coincide: as, the picture does not agree with the original.
- To be consistent; harmonize; not to conflict or be repugnant: as, this story agrees with what has been related by others.
- B. With a thing or things for the subject, in which case agree now takes no preposition except with or in after it, though formerly to was also so used.
- To yield assent; consent; rarely, express concurrence: as, he agreed to accompany the ambassador.
- To come to one opinion or mind; come to an arrangement or understanding; arrive at a settlement.
- To live in concord or without contention; harmonize in action; be mutually accordant in intercourse or relation.
- To be of one mind; harmonize in opinion or feeling: as, with regard to the expediency of the law all the parties agree.
- A. With a personal or personified subject, in which case agree is either used absolutely or is followed by with before the agreeing object, and by upon, on, for, to, or in, and sometimes with, before the object or condition of the agreement; the latter may be expressed by an infinitive or a clause.
- In good part; kindly; in a friendly manner.
- Reflect on, or reason about
- Ponder
- Have a recollection
- Recall knowledge from memory
- Judge
- Look upon
- Judge or regard
- To entertain a sentiment or opinion (in a specified way): with of: as, to think highly of a person's abilities.
- To attend (on); fasten the mind (on): followed by of.
- To imagine: followed by of or on.
- To exercise the intellect, as in apprehension, judgment, or inference; exercise the cognitive faculties in any way not involving outward observation, or the passive reception of ideas from other minds.
- To solve by process of thought: as, to think out a chess problem.
- To devise; plan; project.
- To modify (an immediate object of cognition) at will; operate on by thought (in a specified way).
- To feel: as, to think scorn.
- To hold as a belief or opinion; opine; believe; consider.
- To purpose; intend; mean; contemplate; have in mind (to do): usually followed by an infinitive clause as the object.
- To judge problematically; form a conception of (something) in the mind and recognize it as possibly true, without decidedly assenting to it as such.
- To cognize; apprehend; grasp intellectually.
- To form a mental image of; imagine: often equivalent to recollect; recall; consider.
- To judge; say to one's self mentally; form as a judgment or conception.
- To seem good.
- To seem; appear: with indirect object (dative).
- (idiom) (think twice) To weigh something carefully.
- (idiom) (think nothing of) To give little consideration to; regard as routine or usual.
- (idiom) (think little of) To regard as inferior; have a poor opinion of.
- (idiom) (think big) To plan ambitiously or on a grand scale.
- (idiom) (think better of) To change one's mind about; reconsider.
- (idiom) (aloud/out loud) To speak one's thoughts audibly.
- (idiom) (come to think of it) When one considers the matter; on reflection.
AGREE vs THINK: RELATED WORDS
- Sympathize, Accept, Disagree, Fit in, Tally, Consort, Gibe, Check, Match, Fit, Harmonize, Jibe, Correspond, Accord, Concur
- Call up, Recall, Conceive, Recollect, Cogitate, Intend, Remind, Consider, Remember, Mean, Reckon, Imagine, Believe, Guess, Suppose
AGREE vs THINK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Acknowledge, Endorse, Think, Say, Believe, Sympathize, Accept, Tally, Gibe, Check, Match, Fit, Correspond, Accord, Concur
- Retrieve, Call up, Recall, Conceive, Recollect, Intend, Remind, Consider, Remember, Mean, Reckon, Imagine, Believe, Guess, Suppose
AGREE vs THINK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- By signing this document, I agree that I have read and understood this document and I agree to be bound by its terms.
- By accepting, you agree to the responsibilities of being a US citizen and agree to respect the laws of the country and its peoples.
- Strongly agree Agree Disagree Strongly disagree Finally, we are interested in your general opinions about your community.
- The seller can agree to the price reduction, agree to make repairs or tell the buyer they will do neither.
- Or responsive frameworks are you agree to japan surrendered at that you agree to redirect traffic to build links.
- We cannot agree on everything when it comes to China, not in Washington, but we can agree on some basic moral principles.
- In other words, to mutually agree is to agree to the terms of a legally binding contract.
- By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Notice and European users agree to the data transfer policy.
- Using our Services or clicking I agree, YOU agree to our use of cookies design project Unite in!
- Strongly disagree Somewhat disagree Mildly disagree Mildly agree Somewhat agree Strongly agree River herring populations are healthy.
- It should make people think; and as the author well says, if we do not like his ideas, then think of better ones.
- If you think you will never get caught, think again.
- So I think the country has shifted in that way, and I think Biden is responding accordingly.
- If you have liquidity, I think you should think about investing.
- Whenever I think of the New Year, I always think about you.
- Language shapes the way we think, and determines what we can think about.
- When most Georgia residents think about selling their home they think of listing with a real estate agent.
- If you think that displaying your images on a digital frame means sacrificing overall quality, think again.
- If you think the charts and tools through your brokerage are enough, think again.
- Maybe, I think the best of people and think that.
AGREE vs THINK: QUESTIONS
- What do Rosencrantz and Guildenstern agree about Polonius?
- Can higher dimensions agree with inverse-square gravity?
- Do you agree that HeartGold/SoulSilver is unsupported?
- Should you use agree/disagree questions in surveys?
- What do most sociologists agree with Auguste Comte?
- Does Daniel Dennett agree with the eliminative materialists?
- Does everybody agree about the value of complaining?
- Does Hartshorne agree with Whitehead about possibility?
- Can philosophers agree on human reproductive cloning?
- Did Mosellanus agree with Erasmus on predestination?
- What should recruiters think about when recruiting?
- What do mainstream scientists think about creationism?
- What do different people think about multiculturalism?
- What does I think about death/I think about life mean?
- Do some people talk to think and others think to talk?
- What does Ron Swanson think about what others think of him?
- How to deal with people who think you think they're dumb?
- Why did Burke think the colonists would think twice about war?
- Do you think plastic surgery is an unhealthy way to think?
- Why does my girlfriend think I think she's hilarious?