THINK vs RECALL: NOUN
- A thinking; thought.
- The act or an instance of deliberate or extended thinking; a meditation.
- An instance of deliberate thinking
- In Information retrieval, the fraction of (all) relevant material that is returned by a search
- Memory; the ability to remember.
- The action or fact of calling someone or something back.
- Short for recall of judicial decisions, the right or procedure by which the decision of a court may be directly reversed or annulled by popular vote, as was advocated, in 1912, in the platform of the Progressive party for certain cases involving the police power of the state.
- The right or procedure by which a public official, commonly a legislative or executive official, may be removed from office, before the end of his term of office, by a vote of the people to be taken on the filing of a petition signed by a required number or percentage of qualified voters.
- A call on the trumpet, bugle, or drum, by which soldiers are recalled from duty, labor, etc.
- A calling back; a revocation.
- A signal-flag used to recall a boat to a ship.
- A musical call played on a drum, bugle, or trumpet to summon back soldiers to the ranks or to camp.
- Revocation; countermand; retraction; abrogation.
- A calling back to mind; the act of summoning up the memory of something; a bringing back from the past.
- A calling back; a summons to return; a demand for reappearance, as of a performer after he has left the stage (usually indicated by long-continued applause): as, the recall of an ambassador; the recall of an actor.
- The right to employ this procedure.
- The procedure by which an elected official may be removed from office by popular vote.
- The act of revoking.
- The ability to remember information or experiences.
- A signal, such as a bugle call, used to summon troops back to their posts.
- The act of recalling or summoning back, especially an official order to return.
- A request by the manufacturer of a defective product to return the product (as for replacement or repair)
- A call to return
- A bugle call that signals troops to return
- The process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort)
- The act of removing an official by petition
THINK vs RECALL: ADJECTIVE
- Requiring much thought to create or assimilate.
- N/A
THINK vs RECALL: VERB
- 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
- Go back to something earlier
- Recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection
- Call to mind
- Summon to return
- Cause one's (or someone else's) thoughts or attention to return from a reverie or digression
- Make unavailable; bar from sale or distribution
- Cause to be returned
THINK vs RECALL: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- 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.
- N/A
THINK vs RECALL: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To call back to mind; to revive in memory; to recollect; to remember.
- To revoke; to annul by a subsequent act; to take back; to withdraw.
- To call back; to summon to return
- To request return of (a product) to the manufacturer, as for necessary repairs or adjustments.
- To subject (an elected official) to a recall.
- To bring back; restore.
- To cancel, take back, or revoke.
- To summon back to awareness of or concern with the subject or situation at hand.
- To be reminiscent of; seem similar to.
- To remember; recollect.
- To ask or order to return.
THINK vs RECALL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- 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.
- Bar from sale or distribution
- Make unavailable
- Have a recollection
- Recall knowledge from memory
- Bring to mind
- Synonyms Recant, Abjure, etc. (see renounce); Repeal, Rescind, etc. (see abolish).
- To revoke; take back, as something given or parted with; countermand; abrogate; cancel: as, to recall a decree or an order; to recall an edition of a book.
- To call back to mind or perception; renew the memory or experience of; bring again, as something formerly experienced.
- To call back from a distance; summon or cause to return or to be returned; bring back by a call, summons, or demand: as, to recall an ambassador or a ship; we cannot recall our lost youth.
THINK vs RECALL: RELATED WORDS
- Call up, Recall, Conceive, Recollect, Cogitate, Intend, Remind, Consider, Remember, Mean, Reckon, Imagine, Believe, Guess, Suppose
- Hark back, Call back, Come back, Call up, Anamnesis, Echo, Retrieve, Remembrance, Return, Think, Withdraw, Remind, Recollection, Recollect, Remember
THINK vs RECALL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Retrieve, Call up, Recall, Conceive, Recollect, Intend, Remind, Consider, Remember, Mean, Reckon, Imagine, Believe, Guess, Suppose
- Recount, Hark back, Call in, Call back, Come back, Call up, Echo, Retrieve, Remembrance, Return, Think, Remind, Recollection, Recollect, Remember
THINK vs RECALL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- 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.
- CPSC has and will request a voluntary product recall by the manufacturer or issue a mandatory recall.
- The first section targets on associated words a student can immediately recall or recall after a delay.
- Board Recall Supported Petition, deliver to the Secretary a Board Recall Process Termination Notice.
- Authority to establish recall requirements or approve recall plans, including direct notification to consumers.
- Free recall, cued recall, and face recognition tests were administered, with confidence assessed for the last two measures.
- The recall was initiated following a recall from their chicken supplier, Tip Top Poultry, Inc.
- With this latest recall, Graco now has the largest car seat recall in American history.
- Recall it, then the Recall will not work.
- Documenting a Recall Incident A recall log must be kept of all failed tests outlining the procedures for the recall of improperly reprocessed items.
- The recall coordinator, with the assistance of the recall team, should evaluate the strategy employed during the recall.
THINK vs RECALL: QUESTIONS
- 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?
- Do depression patients have inferior memory recall?
- Does the recall task influence the false-recall rate?
- Is probability of recall a good measure of free recall?
- When do the participants recall the words they are to recall?
- Do iPads improve patient recall and recall of Physiotherapy patient education?
- Why is my ad recall estimate lower than my Total Recall?
- Why did the recall notification change to a food recall warning?
- Should New York create a recall law to recall Andrew Cuomo?
- Do hormones affect fear recall and extinction recall?
- Why does the empowered recall override a normal recall?