We have no meanings for "assuming too" in our records yet.
1 When he released her, he said, I'm assuming too much, I know.
2 You are assuming too much, Mr.
3 I think you're assuming too much.
4 You are assuming too much.
5 I am now, however, I fear, assuming too much of a character that does not exactly belong to me.
6 But something had to be decided, and these conversations around him which were assuming too free a character must be stopped.
7 Besides all this, Charles had good reason to feel that the governments of New England were assuming too many airs of sovereignty.
8 Her mother had known it, and for the moment,-ifI am not assuming too much in saying so,- Iwasfilling her mother's place.
9 Although given the fact that the same building housed 17 years of Tory cabinet meetings, he'd want to be careful about assuming too much.
10 It was adventuring too far, assuming too much, making light of what ought to be serious, a trick of what ought to be simple.
11 I think I may say, without assuming too much, that our Grotius celebration has been a contribution of some value to this growth of earnestness.
12 "It seems to me," I broke in, "that you are both assuming too much.
13 "I think that is assuming too much," said Caldew.
14 "I may be assuming too much, but given your note and your plans, I thought, that is, I suspecte}d}-
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Assuming too through the time
Assuming too across language varieties