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  1. Nov 25, 2014 · As a generalisation, however, "I can only imagine" usually indicates one of two things (which often overlap somewhat in practice). That the speaker is talking about something unusual, extreme, shocking, or otherwise exceptional. The intended implication is "I have to use my imagination to visualise that, because I have never had a real ...

  2. Oct 28, 2021 · 1. Definitely not with (1), because as we walked indicates that it happened in the past. (2) talks about imagining something that may happen in the future, so you could use can. (3) is rather loosely expressed - Prof. Cox didn't imagine something 150 years ago, he is imagining what a person at that time might have thought.

  3. Nov 7, 2021 · I don't imagine + affirmative verb. E.g. I don't Imagine John will read the instructions I sent him. I've been comparing this construction with I can't imagine .... My question is, do they have the same meaning, even though they are differed by the verb and modal? I've tried to search related problems involving **I can't imagine... ** provided ...

  4. Mar 8, 2017 · For instance if someone tell me something like "I had a bad day then I am tired and bored etc..." I would like to answer something which means that "okai I can imagine" meaning okai I can understand what you are feeling now. In my native language which is French we use to say "I can imagine" but I am not sure about English. thanks

  5. Nov 21, 2020 · 1. You probably won't imagine where I am writing you from. You probably can't imagine where I am writing you from. Both of these are correct and reasonably idiomatic. "can't imagine" is a bit stronger in meaning than "won't imagine" is. "where I am writing you from." is perfectly correct, but feels slightly awkward or old-fashioned to me.

  6. Jul 12, 2019 · One of the Lexico definitions is. 2 Expressing an opinion about something that is logically very likely. There must be something wrong with people who can do cryptic crosswords. The phrase "can't imagine" means trying to put oneself in somebody else's position, but being unable. It is almost a contradiction though: the speaker has tried to do ...

  7. Jun 19, 2020 · 1. "Just" in this context works as an intensifier, akin to "truly" and "really", and even "absolutely". Share. Improve this answer. answered Jun 19, 2020 at 9:26. Prime Mover. 5,311 7 21. What's the difference between "I can just imagine what he is going through" and "I can only imagine what he is going through"? – Mr. X.

  8. No, only the first example is grammatically correct. (2) in ways which you can't imagine. The relative clause used with which (as well as all other wh-words) always needs to be separated from the main clause by a comma, and is a non-defining relative clause.

  9. May 11, 2021 · 1. You could imagine sentence (a) (being??) uttered by someone consulting their diary and seeing that tomorrow's page is blank. I can imagine him (being??) really angry. I can't imagine elephants (being??) able to fly.

  10. Feb 14, 2018 · Like if, the hypothetical effects of imagine only last for the current sentence: that's why I have joined the two sentences together in the first example. An alternative would be to maintain the hypothetical mood by repeating "Imagine that.." at the start of each sentence. The hypothetical construction would therefore be difficult for a long scenario, unless you particularly want to keep ...

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