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have in mind

VERB
  1. intend to refer to
    Yes, I meant you when I complained about people who gossip!
    I'm thinking of good food when I talk about France

How To Use have in mind In A Sentence

  • In using the term aristocratic literature I have in mind an intellectual rather than a social category. Definitions: Essays in Contemporary Criticism
  • Speaking to Alfie on the phone last week, he was almost inaudibly giddy, and told me about lots of frankly crazy and brilliant applications they have in mind, one of which is Borough Pong. Dashingly Hot Off The Press
  • The robot I have in mind will rent for about $600 per month, or about $1 per hour.
  • But let's face it: When you're 22 years old and sitting there with a mortar board lid on, the last thing that you have in mind is taking notes on whatever the speaker has to say.
  • What might any informed Vietnamese have in mind on the subject?
  • The minimum-wage advocates who have thought much about it (of course, many haven't) usually have in mind some kind of monopsony model The Minimum Wage, Con't, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • As far as I know I've never smelled bitter aloes but the name suggests the smell I have in mind.
  • One thing the Malians have in mind is help in developing their infant tourist industry.
  • The term baroque seems, however, most acceptable if we have in mind a general European movement whose conven - tions and literary style can be described concretely and whose chronological limits can be fixed narrowly, as from the last decades of the sixteenth century to the middle of the eighteenth century in a few countries. BAROQUE IN LITERATURE
  • We usually have in mind a system where a stem is combined with various affixes, which might be prefixes, suffixes, or infixes.
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