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  1. Otherwise, we say something is "in my mind" to denote that we have remembered something but it is not at the forefront of our thoughts. That said, "the mind" is an abstract thing and can mean different things in different contexts and can be described in different ways. Of your examples, the first sounds correct: There's a lot going on in my mind.

  2. @FumbleFingers: The only thing I see "wrong" with "slipped out of my mind" is that I read it first as [slipped] [out of my mind], with "out of my mind" meaning "crazy/hysterical" and then have to correct myself, making it seem unnatural and making it much more distracting than the easier to read "it slipped my mind" –

  3. Jun 9, 2020 · 1. Neither of the sources you quote are reliable - one is an ELL post, presumably from an English language learner, the other a comment on an article from a reader. "Come to mind" is an idiomatic expression to describe the recall of thoughts, for example: When I think of great composers, Beethoven comes to mind.

  4. Aug 18, 2016 · "My mind is foggy." Perhaps you are very tired or there are some drugs or exhaustion which is affecting your mind. "My mind is fuzzy." Usually fuzzy is used to describe imperfect recollection. "I think I had eggs for tea, but my [mind/brain/memory] is fuzzy". Most people will simply say "I cannot concentrate" as mentioned in the other answer.

  5. Jun 6, 2014 · 1. 'My' can be used as a possessive pronoun or adjective, but 'mine' can only be used as a pronoun. It means 'my' is always placed before a noun. e. g. My book is blue. Whereas 'mine' cannot be used as above. 'Mine' is always used after a helping verb to refer to something previously mentioned. e.

  6. "It comes to my mind that there are a great many ways to skin a cat." "It comes to mind that there are a great many ways to skin a cat." In response to @Epiphany, the use of "What comes to one's mind" is not to expand the meaning to known or unknown persons ("ones") who may or may not be present to have something occur to.

  7. Jul 21, 2020 · They are very bad language guides. To use 'out of' and 'mind' to say that someone is insane or 'crazy', you need a possessive pronoun such as my, your, his, her, etc. I am out of my mind, she is out of her mind, etc. 'Out of mind' is an old fashioned phrase meaning 'forgotten, overlooked, insignificant, not readily remembered'.

  8. Dec 23, 2020 · The argument about the correctness of 'me' and 'my' has been going on for a long time. Jespersen and Fowler discussed this quite heatedly in the tracts of the Society for Pure English in the 1920s. You will find writers of style guides who insist that only the possessive (my) is correct, but the use of the direct object pronoun (me) is widely ...

  9. May 9, 2021 · [To be the main thought in someone's mind, causing other things to be forgotten] 2. occupied my mind [If something occupies your mind, thoughts, or attention, or if it occupies you, you think about it a lot] 3. preyed on my mind [If a problem preys on your mind, you cannot stop thinking about it]

  10. Nov 29, 2013 · The native, mostly idiomatic expression is. my mind is full of noun expression. In your case: My mind is full of problems in my life. Often the noun will be a mass noun. A weekend of fishing, then cleaning caught fish, cooking fish, pickling, freezing, and in the end eating so much my stomach is about to burst. Then a night of dreaming about fish.