相信英语怎么说
My advice is to do your research, go with your gut and persevere.
Don't believe all the hype—the book isn't that good.
Managers who believe the hype of a flat world do so at their own risk.
I do not believe such a quack can cure me of tracheitis.
Don't believe him, he is a quack.
This might not blow your mind, but for a long, long time this was accepted to be true.
We have confidence that your journey toward self-discovery and your progress toward finding your own passion will yield more than personal advancement.
You've got a class called "Painting with watercolours", I believe.
Looking back, did I believe what I actually said?
Cohan believes there are at least two possible explanations for this phenomenon.
Baby boomers believe that middle age lasts until they are 70, a study has found.
I am convinced that some people complain just to annoy me, for something to do, or they simply enjoy complaining.
She couldn't believe that her plan for a movie career had all been merely a pipe dream.
I believe that the writer of this amazing book must be a person full of imagination.
Alan looked at him and said calmly, "I don't believe you."
She says: "I believe that the day is not far off when we will be able to prescribe drugs that cause severed spinal cords to heal, hearts to regenerate and lost limbs to regrow."
I think Liverpool will win on Saturday, because they have the knack of playing under pressure, the desire and the experience.
Marriage counsellor Terry Real said he believes some users go on Facebook to create a fantasy life and escape the drudgery.
By pure thought, by concentration of mind, the riddle, he believed, would be revealed to the initiate.
Hard times may hold you down at what usually seems like the most inopportune time, but you should remember that they won't last forever.
"I went out not knowing where I was going or what I was going to be working on," Carter told FoxNews.com. "But I trusted these gentlemen," he said.
Wolf Dad is even stricter than Tiger Mom and is epitomised by Xiao Baiyou, a father who believes that "beating kids is part of their upbringing."
The irony is that if he completely accepted the fact that certainty doesn't exist, he would create the certainty he craves: he would be absolutely certain that certainty doesn't exist.
And as long as they heard the strokes of the axe they felt safe, for they believed that their father was working near them.
Our predisposition to believe in a supernatural world stays with us as we get older.