think
come to think of it said when an idea or point occurs to you while you are speaking.
give someone furiously to think give a person cause to think hard.
☞ This is a literal translation of the French phrase donner furieusement à penser.
great minds think alike: seemind.
have (got) another think coming used to express the speaker's disagreement with or unwillingness to do something suggested by someone else. informal
2000Sunday Herald (Glasgow) The accelerating pretender has another think coming if it imagines that it has an easy shot at becoming world number one.
lie back and think of England: seelie.
think better of: seebetter.
think big: seebig.
think nothing of consider (an activity others regard as odd, wrong, or difficult) as straightforward or normal.
2004Residential Architect His foreign business partners think nothing of scheduling an hour-and-a-half meeting for 10:30 at night, then being back at work by 8 am.
think nothing of it do not apologize or feel bound to show gratitude (used as a polite response).
think on your feet react to events quickly and effectively.
think outside the box: seebox.
think twice consider a course of action carefully before embarking on it.
think the world of: seeworld.