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thought
1[thawt]
noun
the product of mental activity; that which one thinks.
a body of thought.
a single act or product of thinking; idea or notion.
to collect one's thoughts.
the act or process of thinking; mental activity.
Thought as well as action wearies us.
the capacity or faculty of thinking, reasoning, imagining, etc..
All her thought went into her work.
a consideration or reflection.
Thought of death terrified her.
meditation, contemplation, or recollection.
deep in thought.
intention, design, or purpose, especially a half-formed or imperfect intention.
We had some thought of going.
anticipation or expectation.
I had no thought of seeing you here.
consideration, attention, care, or regard.
She took no thought of her appearance.
a judgment, opinion, or belief.
According to his thought, all violence is evil.
the intellectual activity or the ideas, opinions, etc., characteristic of a particular place, class, or time.
Greek thought.
a very small amount; a touch; bit; trifle.
The steak is a thought underdone.
thought
2[thawt]
verb
simple past tense and past participle of think.
thought
/ θɔːt /
verb
the past tense and past participle of think
noun
the act or process of thinking; deliberation, meditation, or reflection
a concept, opinion, or idea
philosophical or intellectual ideas typical of a particular time or place
German thought in the 19th century
application of mental attention; consideration
he gave the matter some thought
purpose or intention
I have no thought of giving up
expectation
no thought of reward
a small amount; trifle
you could be a thought more enthusiastic
kindness or regard
he has no thought for his widowed mother
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of thought1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
And before Slash can finish his next thought, he starts gushing about a recent trip to Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, where he visited Ferrari World, home to a number of celebrated roller coasters.
The statement added: “His kindness and passion touched everyone who knew him. Thank you for your support and kind thoughts during this difficult time.”
“I’m not saying he was … we noticed it and the league thought it maybe it was illegal, too.”
Then, somehow, he lost his pack and walked miles in the opposite direction of where he thought he was heading.
In a sense, Sweeney writes Dennis as someone also mourning the death of an idealized situation he thought would fix him.
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Related Words
When To Use
The word thought is hard to spell because it sounds as if it should be spelled [ thawt ]. The combination of letters -ought can be pronounced many different ways (nine to be exact!). How to spell thought: Thinking is hard work. It might make you go "oh! ugh!" (-ough). Add a t to the end and you get thought.
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