We have no meanings for "imagine than" in our records yet.
1 There is something simpler still to imagine than the culpability of Natacha.
2 It is so much easier, as Sordello knew, to imagine than to do.
3 It is more easy to imagine than describe Mrs Broderick's state of anxiety.
4 What her thoughts had been, every true mother can better imagine than we describe.
5 These all feel like very real possibilities, far easier to imagine than returning to safety.
6 What more glorious condition of being can we imagine than from impure to become pure?
7 Nothing more striking or more singular could Theos imagine than the scene now before him, .
8 So, could anything be easier to imagine than winning lotto and living the life of luxury?
9 There is nothing more difficult for people to imagine than how things affect a child's mind.
10 It is easier to imagine than to act, so no human being is free of this tendency.
11 And a magnificently less likely musical it is hard to imagine than next year's planned Hunger Games the musical.
12 Our readers can better imagine than we can describe the feelings of the soldier boy during that long night.
13 He sent this off by his cabman, and went into the breakfast-room in a state of mind easier to imagine than to describe.
14 As for myself, the reader can better imagine than I can describe my sensations, which were of a character almost to overwhelm me.
15 The humiliation of poor Euschemon on learning that he was indebted for his credit to the devil is easier to imagine than to describe.
16 Nothing more simple can be imagined than the appointments of their monastery.
Other examples for "imagine than"
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