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Surfer Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

think, of?

Hello, everyone.

I came across the following reading some car review:

"Other than the outstanding Telsa Model S, no recent electric car conceived for large-scale production has managed to live up to the hype and sales expectations heaped upon it at launch. Think Nissan Leaf, Mitsubishi MiEV and the Renault Zoe in Europe."

What does the bolded part mean? shouldn't there be of after think?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

Normally, yes, but this is a sort of shorthand, which is quite common. We need to get away for a vacation! Think Hawai'i, waving palm trees, sandy beaches, pure blue water.

  • Normally, yes, but this is a sort of shorthand, which is quite common.
  • We need to get away for a vacation!
  • Think Hawai'i, waving palm trees, sandy beaches, pure blue water.
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1 Answers
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Normally, yes, but this is a sort of shorthand, which is quite common. We need to get away for a vacation! Think Hawai'i, waving palm trees, sandy beaches, pure blue water.

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