- think
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I. verb
(thought; thinking)
Etymology: Middle English thenken, from Old English thencan; akin to Old High German denken to think, Latin tongēre to know — more at thanks
Date: before 12th century
transitive verb
1. to form or have in the mind
2. to have as an intention <thought to return early> 3. a. to have as an opinion <think it's so> b. to regard as ; consider <think the rule unfair> 4. a. to reflect on ; ponder <think the matter over> b. to determine by reflecting <think what to do next> 5. to call to mind ; remember <he never thinks to ask how we do> 6. to devise by thinking — usually used with up <thought up a plan to escape> 7. to have as an expectation ; anticipate <we didn't think we'd have any trouble> 8. a. to center one's thoughts on <talks and thinks business> b. to form a mental picture of 9. to subject to the processes of logical thought <think things out> intransitive verb 1. a. to exercise the powers of judgment, conception, or inference ; reason b. to have in the mind or call to mind a thought 2. a. to have the mind engaged in reflection ; meditate b. to consider the suitability <thought of her for president> 3. to have a view or opinion <thinks of himself as a poet> 4. to have concern — usually used with of <a man must think first of his family> 5. to consider something likely ; suspect <may happen sooner than you think> • thinker noun Synonyms: think, conceive, imagine, fancy, realize, envisage, envision mean to form an idea of. think implies the entrance of an idea into one's mind with or without deliberate consideration or reflection <I just thought of a good joke>. conceive suggests the forming and bringing forth and usually developing of an idea, plan, or design <conceived of a new marketing approach>. imagine stresses a visualization <imagine you're at the beach>. fancy suggests an imagining often unrestrained by reality but spurred by desires <fancied himself a super athlete>. realize stresses a grasping of the significance of what is conceived or imagined <realized the enormity of the task ahead>. envisage and envision imply a conceiving or imagining that is especially clear or detailed <envisaged a totally computerized operation> <envisioned a cure for the disease>. Synonyms: think, cogitate, reflect, reason, speculate, deliberate mean to use one's powers of conception, judgment, or inference. think is general and may apply to any mental activity, but used alone often suggests attainment of clear ideas or conclusions <teaches students how to think>. cogitate implies deep or intent thinking <cogitated on the mysteries of nature>. reflect suggests unhurried consideration of something recalled to the mind <reflecting on fifty years of married life>. reason stresses consecutive logical thinking <able to reason brilliantly in debate>. speculate implies reasoning about things theoretical or problematic <speculated on the fate of the lost explorers>. deliberate suggests slow or careful reasoning before forming an opinion or reaching a conclusion or decision <the jury deliberated for five hours>. II. noun Date: 1834 an act of thinking <has another think coming> III. adjective Date: 1892 relating to, requiring, or stimulating thinking
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.