Assume
in sentence
1435 examples of Assume in a sentence
Because they somehow
assume
that the Internet is going to be the catalyst of change that will push young people into the streets, while in fact it may actually be the new opium for the masses which will keep the same people in their rooms downloading pornography.
We should not
assume
that families are a certain number or a certain gender of people.
Our mistake was to
assume
that the capacity of the earth for self-repair had no limits.
So he said, "I'll
assume
that if you have one cot death in a family, the chance of a second child dying from cot death aren't changed."
So he said, "Here, I'll
assume
that these events are independent.
Unfortunately, I don't fly trans-Atlantic business class often enough to know, or any other kind of business class really, but I
assume
that in business class, you don't hear many expressions of, you know, bigotry about racial groups or ethnic groups, because the people who are flying trans-Atlantic business class are doing business with all these people; they're making money off all these people.
As technology progresses, and as it advances, many of us
assume
that these advances make us more intelligent, make us smarter and more connected to the world.
But are we to
assume
that the same brilliance and creativity and adaptability that got us up to the top of that energy mountain in the first place is somehow mysteriously going to evaporate when we have to design a creative way back down the other side?
Because if we cling to it, and continue to
assume
that it can underpin our choices, the future that it presents to us is one which is really unmanageable.
And if there is a supermassive black hole, what we need to
assume
is that it's a black hole on a diet.
If, for example, house prices are routinely described as climbing and climbing, higher and higher, people might naturally
assume
that that rise is unstoppable.
And we started developing a project that's called Mobilize Us, because many of us, I would assume, want to help and lend our skills and our expertise, but we are often not there when a frontline community or a single individual faces an abuse.
Why would a man
assume
that you would believe something bizarre like this?
SB: It was kind of a chance that in the spring of '66, thanks to an LSD experience on a rooftop in San Francisco, I got thinking about, again, something that Fuller talked about, that a lot of people
assume
that the Earth is flat and kind of infinite in terms of its resources, but once you really grasp that it's a sphere and that there's only so much of it, then you start husbanding your resources and thinking about it as a finite system.
How do you explain when things don't go as we
assume?
And Samuel Pierpont Langley had, what we assume, to be the recipe for success.
The writer, Thomas Frank, says that this might be a kind of explanation why some voters vote against their best interests, that voters, like a lot of us, assume, that if they hear something that sounds like it's sincere, that it's coming from the gut, that it's passionate, that it's more authentic.
James Baldwin said, "Everything now, we must
assume
is in our own hands; we have no right to
assume
otherwise."
People that have grown up in such a paradigm might find it motivating, but it is a mistake to
assume
that everyone thrives under the pressure of choosing alone.
These dynamics are what makes it easy to dismiss protests as riots or to
assume
they are of limited political utility.
But it's worth recalling Wittgenstein's remark on the subject: "Tell me," he asked a friend, "why do people always say it was natural for man to
assume
that the Sun went 'round the Earth, rather than that the Earth was rotating?"
Watching without dialog, you'd
assume
that the movie had 2 monsters.
I guess the most unsupportable aspect is that even the main characters, who I
assume
are the kids behind the movie, cannot even pretend to act.
We can only
assume
he had a Charlie's Angels fixation at one time.
The intro to the movie is quite possibly the worst intro to a horror film I have ever seen, I mean a angry chick hitting a guy in the head with a frying pan isn't at all frightening which is what I
assume
the director was aiming for, but in fact it was "mildly" funny.
Cates is insipid and unconvincing, Kline over-acts as always, as does Lithgow while butchering an English accent (at least, I
assume
that's what he's attempting), and the tone staggers uneasily between farcical and maudlin.
I
assume
that Esteban was either aiming to take advantage of this or that he himself digs soap operas, because that is what unfolds over the course of this film, so much to the point that it kicks the whole oil company plot to the side, almost as if they imagined halfway through the making of this film that it had become tiresome, because it seems like at least three of the supporting characters have had their back story and character development severely compromised to make room for more sex and crying scenes.
This is bathroom humor aimed, I assume, at those who've had several bongs, which can only explain why many ecstatic reviewers have heralded this crap as "the best television writing ever."
I
assume
that those who hate such simpleton humor were unable to watch long enough to care to submit a review, but I am just sending out a warning shot to those unaware viewers who are looking for high-end comedy.
The makeup on the Reverend James Johnston as a older man didn't really make you
assume
he was older.
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