SUPPOSE vs THINK: NOUN
- Supposition.
- Supposition; presumption; conjecture; opinion.
- An instance of deliberate thinking
- A thinking; thought.
- The act or an instance of deliberate or extended thinking; a meditation.
SUPPOSE vs THINK: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Requiring much thought to create or assimilate.
SUPPOSE vs THINK: VERB
- Express a supposition
- To believe especially on uncertain or tentative grounds
- Expect, believe, or suppose
- Take for granted or as a given; suppose beforehand
- Require as a necessary antecedent or precondition
- To take for granted; to conclude, with less than absolute supporting data; to believe.
- To theorize or hypothesize.
- Have in mind as a purpose
- Recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection
- Imagine or visualize
- Decide by pondering, reasoning, or reflecting
- Focus one's attention on a certain state
- Dispose the mind in a certain way
- Judge or regard; look upon; judge
- Bring into a given condition by mental preoccupation
- Be capable of conscious thought
- Use or exercise the mind or one's power of reason in order to make inferences, decisions, or arrive at a solution or judgments
- Have or formulate in the mind
- Expect, believe, or suppose
- Ponder; reflect on, or reason about
SUPPOSE vs THINK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To make supposition; to think; to be of opinion.
- To imagine; conjecture.
- To consider as a suggestion.
- To imply as an antecedent condition; presuppose.
- To consider to be probable or likely.
- To assume to be true or real for the sake of argument or explanation.
- To have or formulate in the mind.
- To decide by reasoning, reflection, or pondering.
- To reason about or reflect on; ponder.
- 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 judge or regard; look upon.
- To expect; hope.
- To believe; suppose.
SUPPOSE vs THINK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To represent to one's self, or state to another, not as true or real, but as if so, and with a view to some consequence or application which the reality would involve or admit of; to imagine or admit to exist, for the sake of argument or illustration; to assume to be true; as, let us suppose the earth to be the center of the system, what would be the result?
- To put by fraud in the place of another.
- To require to exist or to be true; to imply by the laws of thought or of nature.
- To imagine; to believe; to receive as true.
- N/A
SUPPOSE vs THINK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Suppose beforehand
- Take for granted or as a given
- To make or form a supposition; think; imagine.
- To put, as one thing by fraud in the place of another.
- To imply; involve as a further proposition or consequence; proceed from, as from a hypothesis.
- To assume as true without reflection; presume; opine; believe.
- To make a hypothesis; formulate a proposition without reference to its being true or false, with a view of tracing out its consequences.
- To infer hypothetically; conceive a state of things, and dwell upon the idea (at least for a moment) with an inclination to believe it true, due to the agreement of its consequences with observed fact, but not free from doubt.
- To seem; appear: with indirect object (dative).
- To seem good.
- To judge; say to one's self mentally; form as a judgment or conception.
- To form a mental image of; imagine: often equivalent to recollect; recall; consider.
- To cognize; apprehend; grasp intellectually.
- 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 purpose; intend; mean; contemplate; have in mind (to do): usually followed by an infinitive clause as the object.
- To hold as a belief or opinion; opine; believe; consider.
- 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.
- Ponder
- To attend (on); fasten the mind (on): followed by of.
- Have a recollection
- To modify (an immediate object of cognition) at will; operate on by thought (in a specified way).
- To devise; plan; project.
- To solve by process of thought: as, to think out a chess problem.
- 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.
- Reflect on, or reason about
- To feel: as, to think scorn.
- To imagine: followed by of or on.
- (idiom) (aloud/out loud) To speak one's thoughts audibly.
- (idiom) (come to think of it) When one considers the matter; on reflection.
- (idiom) (think better of) To change one's mind about; reconsider.
- (idiom) (think big) To plan ambitiously or on a grand scale.
- (idiom) (think little of) To regard as inferior; have a poor opinion of.
- (idiom) (think nothing of) To give little consideration to; regard as routine or usual.
- (idiom) (think twice) To weigh something carefully.
SUPPOSE vs THINK: RELATED WORDS
- Pretend, Daresay, Presume, Maybe, Hypothecate, Theorise, Speculate, Theorize, Conjecture, Hypothesize, Say, Imagine, Reckon, Think, Guess
- Call up, Recall, Conceive, Recollect, Cogitate, Intend, Remind, Consider, Remember, Mean, Reckon, Imagine, Believe, Guess, Suppose
SUPPOSE vs THINK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Infer, Guessing, Feel, Believe, Pretend, Presume, Maybe, Theorise, Speculate, Conjecture, Say, Imagine, Reckon, Think, Guess
- Retrieve, Call up, Recall, Conceive, Recollect, Intend, Remind, Consider, Remember, Mean, Reckon, Imagine, Believe, Guess, Suppose
SUPPOSE vs THINK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Suppose your organization also values low cost suppliers.
- Yes, men need to eat too, I suppose.
- How am i suppose to do business then.
- Suppose I have taken a loan of Rs.
- These men are not drunk, as you suppose.
- Suppose you were in a minor car accident.
- That, I suppose, makes everything quite all right.
- Suppose this proportion is valid for all homes.
- It is not suppose to be easy for the waiter, it is suppose to be easy for the guest, in this case me!
- Suppose, just suppose, we had a machine that could transfer the life out of one person and into the other.
- 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.
SUPPOSE vs THINK: QUESTIONS
- Is upstream light suppose to be solid green and not blinking?
- Did Brecht say'suppose they gave a war and nobody came?
- Are Emma Watson and Rupert suppose to kiss in the movies?
- What makes you suppose that modern monkeys are not evolving?
- Are golden potatoes suppose to look yellow on the inside?
- How many answers to the suppose crossword clue are there?
- What do you suppose could result from a circuit overload?
- Are you suppose to indent every paragraph in a summary?
- Can we conceive distinct ideas but only suppose incomplete notions?
- How do you remember when to use suppose and supposed?
- 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?