I imagined that I could perceive signs indicative of an approaching storm, and the thought gave rise to serious apprehensions in my mind.
I had often seen him under the influence of excitement, but I had never beheld him in such a state as he was then, and I was afraid to leave him alone, for I imagined that he would seek Bowles immediately.
I imagined that I should be able to support them with all ease; but that, of course, was one of the childish dreams which often found lodgment in my simple brain.
I imagined that I was blind, and what chance could there be for a man who was blind in the desert of El Tyh?
I imagined that I had come in contact with an iceberg, but the sound of voices convinced me, that at last I had fallen in with my fellow creatures.
For some minutes I contemplated the scene, careless and despairing; for I imagined that I had only been permitted to outlive the whole, that my death might be even more terrible.
It is only a few miles away, and we imagined that, in some sudden attack of homesickness, he had gone back to his father, but nothing had been heard of him.
As I have preserved very full notes of all these cases, and was myself personally engaged in many of them, it may be imagined that it is no easy task to know which I should select to lay before the public.
It can be imagined that my close intimacy with Sherlock Holmes had interested me deeply in crime, and that after his disappearance I never failed to read with care the various problems which came before the public.
For an instant I imagined that I had left my own there, but on feeling in my pocket I found that it was all right.
To effect this, weimagined that we were to pass a mountain opposite to that from which the hot spring issued.
This bloody libation is the homage paid to his attachment to these animals, who are supposed to follow him into the other world, where it is imagined that he will again be able to enjoy them.
The number of fixed Koriacs scarcely exceeds at present nine hundred; and though it is not easy to calculate that of the wandering Koriacs, it is imagined that they do not much surpass this amount.
During his stay at an asylum he imagined that it was the superintendent who was a victim to insanity.
He imagined that he was in Walhalla with Goethe, and that he had become King of Hungary and was victorious in battle; he made puns on his family name, Niembsch.
Clare, after having read some historical episode, imagined that he was himself spectator and actor.
The Germans, overestimating the power of the Ruanda kingdom, had weakened the white man's prestige by subsidizing Ngenzi with extravagant gifts of cloth; and he imagined that he could bleed any one who came into his country.
I imagined that it was the call of a bird and, when I again heard the same sound very faintly in the distance, I felt convinced it was not a human voice, and proceeded on my way perfectly at ease.
It may be imagined that my worthy gossip was the tailor I immediately thought of.
After the ice had been thus broken it will be imagined that we had a long conversation.
I felt perishing with the cold; while the postillions seeing me so lightly clad, and so prodigal of my money to speed them on their way, imagined that I was a prince carrying off the heiress of some noble family.
It may be imagined that I did not forget the advocate, Castelli, husband of my dear Lucrezia, whom I had loved so well at Rome and Tivoli.
He imagined that no man can satisfactorily accomplish his life's work without loyal and whole-hearted cooperation of the woman he lives with.
I imagined that he must have been mixed up in some case of graft or that he had at least betrayed several innocent and trusting maidens.
He imagined that he had seen her come back, but he was not quite certain.
I felt very bad; I imagined that it would be up to me to propose to Nancy that evening.
For the rumour went that Edward had lost two kings' ransoms a night for fourteen nights and she imagined that he must be near the end of his resources.
The country was practically unknown to me, but I remembered roughly the way we had taken when we went to the hill-meeting, and I imagined that somewhere in that direction my greatest safety would lie.
None but a woman with some rude fibres in her being can care to be treated in such fashion--and I imagined that Mary's soul was delicate and fragile as a butterfly's wing, and would be bruised by such mishandling.
And he imagined that it might be even more agreeable to read in the fresh stillness of the morning than in the solitary night.
He imagined that a philosopher was one who made the best of a bad job, and he had never heard the word used in any other sense.
He imagined that he was being drawn thither simply by his own curiosity--a curiosity, however, which he considered to be justifiable, and even laudable.
He imagined that he had pacified it; it was only the sullen lull before the storm which burst forth in the days of his successor, with a fury only the more terrible from its temporary delay.
Probably heimagined that if he confessed himself guilty, he would be pardoned, and sent back to his cell.
The description of this stranger was essentially different from that which would have been given of Montreuil, but I imagined that if not the Abbe himself, the stranger was one in his confidence or his employ.
He imagined that he then saw in you powers which might be rendered availing to him: he conquered his pride--a great feature in his character--and he resolved to seek your affection.
I carried the note to a writing-table, for I imagined that it would require an immediate answer, and then read it.
And I imagined that, grown at last utterly indifferent through suffering, she might drift back into her former relations with Fulton, if only because he loved her so much, and no one can keep on saying no forever.
The belt was not in his hand, as we imagined thatit would have been; neither could we discover it anywhere near the spot where he had fallen.
I knew that it would be so; yet, was I to stand by and see the whole object of my journey, the one thing that I imagined that I lived for, destroyed before my very eyes?
He imagined that, two or three days before, two horsemen had passed through the gap in the sand-hills, and had proceeded to a point at the southern end of the lake.
I, personally, imagined that what I had seen was merely in a dream; but I was wide awake, and could clearly hear my companion breathing.
Then he imagined that a quantity of coal had been shipped since the previous day, and if the tug had been at sea at night, she must have been used for towing lighters.
He liked the man and on the whole thought he could be trusted, while he imagined that he was not prompted by idle curiosity but knew something.
He imagined that Jake's motive for slowing down might be misunderstood by the seƱoritas' guardian, since a touch of Moorish influence still colors the Spaniard's care of his women.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "imagined that" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.