think

pronunciation

How to pronounce think in British English: UK [θɪŋk]word uk audio image

How to pronounce think in American English: US [θɪŋk] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    an instance of deliberate thinking
  • Verb:
    judge or regard; look upon; judge
    expect, believe, or suppose
    use or exercise the mind or one's power of reason in order to make inferences, decisions, or arrive at a solution or judgments
    recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection
    imagine or visualize
    focus one's attention on a certain state
    have in mind as a purpose
    decide by pondering, reasoning, or reflecting
    ponder; reflect on, or reason about
    dispose the mind in a certain way
    have or formulate in the mind
    be capable of conscious thought
    bring into a given condition by mental preoccupation

Word Origin

think
think: [OE] Think goes back to an Old English thencan. This was a variant of thyncan ‘seem, appear’, which survives in the archaic methinks (literally ‘it seems to me’), and so etymologically think probably carries the notion of ‘causing images, reflections, etc to appear to oneself, in one’s brain’. The noun thought comes from the same prehistoric Germanic base as produced the verb (as does English thank). Related Germanic forms include German and Dutch denken, Swedish tänka, and Danish tænke.=> thank, thought
think (v.)
Old English þencan "imagine, conceive in the mind; consider, meditate, remember; intend, wish, desire" (past tense þohte, past participle geþoht), probably originally "cause to appear to oneself," from Proto-Germanic *thankjan (cognates: Old Frisian thinka, Old Saxon thenkian, Old High German denchen, German denken, Old Norse þekkja, Gothic þagkjan). Old English þencan is the causative form of the distinct Old English verb þyncan "to seem, to appear" (past tense þuhte, past participle geþuht), from Proto-Germanic *thunkjan (cognates: German dünken, däuchte). Both are from PIE *tong- "to think, feel" which also is the root of thought and thank. The two Old English words converged in Middle English and þyncan "to seem" was absorbed, except for its preservation in archaic methinks "it seems to me." As a noun, "act of prolonged thinking," from 1834. The figurative thinking cap is attested from 1839.

Example

1. You think the plane is bad ?
2. I think people would know .
3. Investors think it might be .
4. Some seem to think so .
5. Does this letter reflect how you really think ?

more: >How to Use "think" with Example Sentences