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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
contemplate
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
contemplate suicide (=think that you might try to kill yourself)
▪ I contemplated suicide on several occasions after my daughter died.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
even
▪ Five years back he would not have even contemplated the Wiring Project.
▪ Though family planning services are theoretically available to them, they are not even contemplated at such an early age.
▪ Perhaps we should even contemplate some naval action to alleviate the blockade and bring help to the 50,000 civilians still trapped there.
▪ We had even contemplated living there permanently.
▪ It's despair that anyone can even contemplate the idea of dropping a bomb or ordering that it should be dropped.
▪ These policies even contemplated the nationalization of industry, in rather more detail than had ever been considered by the Labour Party.
▪ At £166.75 this was far too expensive for most runners to even contemplate.
▪ These are the people who, however, hard it may seem, should really not even contemplate lining up at Blackheath.
ever
▪ No drug company would ever contemplate issuing a medicine which had so many unproven and untested facets to it.
▪ Whether he ever contemplated replacing the monks by secular canons, we do not know.
▪ It was not a situation I have ever contemplated encountering.
▪ But nothing sustained and organised of this kind was ever contemplated in London.
▪ If he had, how could he ever contemplate marrying another woman?
never
▪ She saw her aloneness, now loneliness, and she saw the vista of age, which she had never contemplated before.
▪ Often she will be able to sleep with rising superstars and juvenile celebrities who will profess love but never contemplate marrying her.
seriously
▪ And besides, Hudson was just too attractive to be seriously contemplated.
▪ Whether or not he seriously contemplated stepping down is, in fact, unclear.
▪ It would actually discourage expansion and seems too silly for the Government to seriously contemplate.
■ NOUN
action
▪ Perhaps we should even contemplate some naval action to alleviate the blockade and bring help to the 50,000 civilians still trapped there.
▪ He never acquires the ability to picture his feelings and is thereby unable to fully contemplate his actions in advance.
▪ This, they believe, is the lesson which other Third World figures contemplating similar action are meant to learn.
▪ All thought the blueprint hadn't worked; at least one was contemplating legal action.
change
▪ Skipper Steve Walsh was sent off, and manager Brian Little is contemplating a change of armband after that.
▪ The reasons people contemplate job changes are many and varied.
▪ This is a complicated area, where professional advice is recommended if you are contemplating a change.
▪ The review drew criticism as overly secretive, especially as it became clear that Rumsfeld was contemplating major change.
company
▪ Now my company is contemplating firing me.
▪ No drug company would ever contemplate issuing a medicine which had so many unproven and untested facets to it.
▪ There is no doubt that the convention offers far from ideal terms for private companies contemplating nodule-mining.
future
▪ I was squatting there, contemplating my future, when suddenly the door burst open.
▪ Jack went west for a holiday in the summer of 1954 while he contemplated his future.
▪ She peeled off her wrap, threw herself down on the bunk and gloomily contemplated the future.
government
▪ Only if public order appeared to be on the verge of breaking down would the government contemplate restricting political liberty.
▪ Equalising at 60 is far too expensive for the Government to contemplate.
▪ Or is it possible that the Government are contemplating a repetition of the 1986 strikes on civilian targets in Benghazi and Tripoli?
▪ It would actually discourage expansion and seems too silly for the Government to seriously contemplate.
▪ Before Mr Lawson's speech the markets had decided that the Government was unwilling to contemplate another increase.
life
▪ They are the reason I could not contemplate a life lacking a daily sight of hills.
▪ As for those who did not, it was too soon to contemplate the radically altered life that awaited them.
▪ Then came the moment that may yet help to keep Bradford up and leave Wimbledon to contemplate life in the Nationwide League.
▪ In contrast, the sea leaves no marks and man can then contemplate the essentials of life.
possibility
▪ However, when the unions proved reluctant to make concessions, the employers would have to contemplate the possibility of a lockout.
▪ Paragraph 11 is objectionable also, in my opinion, in that it appears to contemplate the possibility of a class remedy.
▪ Bismarck had refused to contemplate the possibility of Prussian judges exercising a supervision over political decisions.
▪ Was she really contemplating the possibility that he could be involved in something illegal?
■ VERB
refuse
▪ Bismarck had refused to contemplate the possibility of Prussian judges exercising a supervision over political decisions.
▪ Paige pushed the thought away; until the day dawned that she had to she refused to contemplate it.
sit
▪ As Guy sat contemplating this conclusion, a fair-haired child came racing around the corner of the north tower.
▪ Run, I think now as I sit in the dark contemplating Marcy Lupino.
▪ He read the note and then sat there silently contemplating the blossoms.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
gaze at/contemplate your navel
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ A spokeswoman denied that job losses were being contemplated.
▪ Isn't 17 a little young to be contemplating marriage?
▪ Many years ago he had contemplated writing a book about his childhood.
▪ The government was contemplating fining anyone who was found within the island's danger zone.
▪ The rollercoaster stops briefly during each of the loops so that riders can contemplate their own mortality.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Five years back he would not have even contemplated the Wiring Project.
▪ It starts when organizational leaders, planners, and consultants are contemplating the alternatives available to them at a strategic moment.
▪ Meanwhile the audience contemplates his grand opus, wondering what comes next.
▪ Run, I think now as I sit in the dark contemplating Marcy Lupino.
▪ Secondly, we shall need to contemplate the various options available for disposing of the company's properties.
▪ The dealer contemplated suing the recruitment agency until he found a better job.
▪ Though family planning services are theoretically available to them, they are not even contemplated at such an early age.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Contemplate

Contemplate \Con"tem*plate\ (?; 277), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Contemplated (# or #); p. pr. & vb. n. Contemplating.] [L. contemplatus, p. p. of contemplari to contemplate; con- + templum a space for observation marked out by the augur. See Temple.]

  1. To look at on all sides or in all its bearings; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study.

    To love, at least contemplate and admire, What I see excellent.
    --Milton.

    We thus dilate Our spirits to the size of that they contemplate.
    --Byron.

  2. To consider or have in view, as contingent or probable; to look forward to; to purpose; to intend.

    There remain some particulars to complete the information contemplated by those resolutions.
    --A. Hamilton.

    If a treaty contains any stipulations which contemplate a state of future war.
    --Kent.

    Syn: To view; behold; study; ponder; muse; meditate on; reflect on; consider; intend; design; plan; propose; purpose. See Meditate.

Contemplate

Contemplate \Con"tem*plate\, v. i. To consider or think studiously; to ponder; to reflect; to muse; to meditate.

So many hours must I contemplate.
--Shak.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
contemplate

1590s, from Latin contemplatus, past participle of contemplari "survey, observe" (see contemplation). Related: Contemplated; contemplating.

Wiktionary
contemplate

vb. 1 To look at on all sides or in all its aspects; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study, ponder, or consider. 2 To consider as a possibility.

WordNet
contemplate
  1. v. look at thoughtfully; observe deep in thought; "contemplate one's navel"

  2. consider as a possibility; "I contemplated leaving school and taking a full-time job"

  3. think intently and at length, as for spiritual purposes; "He is meditating in his study" [syn: study, meditate]

  4. reflect deeply on a subject; "I mulled over the events of the afternoon"; "philosophers have speculated on the question of God for thousands of years"; "The scientist must stop to observe and start to excogitate" [syn: chew over, think over, meditate, ponder, excogitate, muse, reflect, mull, mull over, ruminate, speculate]

Wikipedia
Contemplate (The Reason You Exist)

Contemplate (The Reason You Exist) is Kai Tracid's third artist album, released on 24 February 2003.

Usage examples of "contemplate".

And above them went the never-resting flight of the Eagle, or, if indeed it rested, then it was at some moment when, soaring into its own dominion, it found a nest exalted beyond human sight in the vast mountains of the creation natural to it, where it might repose and contemplate its aeonian wisdom.

Nor is the possible utility of imitation diminished, but rather increased, when we contemplate the method of a teacher like Agassiz, whose mental operations had the simplicity of genius, and in whose habits of instruction the fundamentals of a right procedure become very obvious.

In your heart you know that no crime was committed and that the lodging of the report you contemplate would only hurt each of you.

While visiting, Nom Anor had often amused himself by contemplating how he had found a new use for the chambers that had once belonged to the legendary Palpatine.

Madame Montoni, meantime, as she looked upon Italy, was contemplating in imagination the splendour of palaces and the grandeur of castles, such as she believed she was going to be mistress of at Venice and in the Apennine, and she became, in idea, little less than a princess.

Albert had himself presided at the arrangement, or, rather, the symmetrical derangement, which, after coffee, the guests at a breakfast of modern days love to contemplate through the vapor that escapes from their mouths, and ascends in long and fanciful wreaths to the ceiling.

Riddle, the very reason Banks had gone so far as to contemplate selling his cottage and leaving the county.

The Mysterious Safari of Charles Bedaux It is not possible to contemplate the long list of luxuries that Charles Bedaux insisted on taking into the bush of British Columbia in the summer of 1934 without a small tingle of admiration.

The Emir Osman Atalan of the Beja was contemplating her bare face steadily, and though his dark eyes were implacable she knew he was looking at her as a woman, a young and beautiful woman who would soon be without a man.

When the sun sank I sat on the terrace meditating and contemplating the colors of the darkly shimmering well-nigh blackish green foliage of the magnolias, the snow of the mountains opposite, glittering golden in the evening light, above it the luminous, pale greenish blue sky, and below the purplish violet mountain slopes and the soft steel blue lake.

She sat up to give him greater freedom of movement, contemplated for an instant the two blind heads resting side by side on the soiled pillow, their faces dirty, their hair tangled, only their eyes shining to no purpose.

There will be bloody battle, my lord king, far bloodier than you wish to contemplate.

I do not believe Brigade Regulations ever contemplated a situation in which the Human command element of a Bolo detachment was directly integrated into one of the Bolos of that detachment.

He would have looked at home on a royal chariot, gripping the carved bonewood of a longbow, polished armor gleaming in the cold sunlight, contemplating the battlefields lay.

He contemplated the other member of the family and wondered what miracle Miss Brooks might conjure to make her drab black gown more suitable this evening.