Example sentences of "[noun] look at a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | This chapter looks at a different kind of self-access access by teachers to a camera . |
2 | That sort of language encouraged the many resentments Americans harbour against high culture ( remember the disparagement of Adlai Stevenson as an ‘ egghead ’ ? ) and led to such curiosae as the Chicago attack on an Eric Fischl painting in which a fully clothed boy looks at a naked man swinging a bat . |
3 | Football : Roxburgh has the flak flying : Don Lindsay looks at a buck-stopping inquest into a hiccup in Paris |
4 | I thought that this was a painting I should n't discuss with Lili , but only when I had walked to the end of the gallery to look at an innocuous picture of a group of long-haired sheep did I ask myself what Robert had been doing in Marie Claire 's bedroom . |
5 | One can imagine someone in a room looking at a beautiful painting , drinking in the details and the way in which they combine to constitute the lovely whole , and there being nothing beyond this observer and the object of his contemplation . |
6 | Each of the poems looked at a different sort of love : that of parents and children , of friends , of lovers , of God … . |
7 | Brian Edwards looks at a handsome solution in central Glasgow — the Eagle Building |
8 | As Eurodisney opens in France , and the Minister of Culture Jack Lang is elevated yet higher by President Mitterrand , Michael Ignatieff looks at a stinging attack on French cultural politics |
9 | This was fewer than the number of people looking at a daily newspaper . |
10 | It is most unlikely that a mother or father looking at a new-born child will be saying : — ‘ We have here a potential villain , who could , in a few years time be getting a living by robbery , violence or some other criminal activity . |
11 | Thank you all very much indeed and thank you particularly for making an effort to come and join us at the A G M , apart from the fact that it would be tedious in the extreme to look at an empty room , I do understand |
12 | It is easier for the lecturer to write than for the student to look at a distant blackboard and then back to his so-called " notes " , and so a phase difference develops between the blackboard and the class . |
13 | It left Kite looking at a five-shot deficit with 18 holes to play today . |
14 | It is one thing to look at an ill person and say that they are out of balance . |
15 | The drama itself also benefits from this approach : writing in role slows the drama down in a very productive fashion , encouraging children to look at a particular situation in much greater depth than they would otherwise . |
16 | I moved along past the drawings to look at a blurred water-colour with a wild smudge of cobalt in the centre . |
17 | Well , and then I went on to Rome to look at a Goldoni production and I had to see the Pope , but I tell you — I hope you 're not Catholic — the sight of the old pullet being cheered up the aisle of St. Peter 's … |
18 | Would millions of people tramp across the hills to look at a twentieth century Broadway Tower ? |
19 | Vasquez looked at a large sample of Behaviouralist work in International Relations and found that the vast majority of it worked within these three key assumptions . |
20 | Yes , the publications will be technology reliant but for the historian looking at a particular subject , there is also key word searching , text retrieval , ( to abstracts as well as full text ) and all on a physically smaller source ( CD-ROM ) . |
21 | An Indian lady from India sits in reception looking at an Indian film magazine and listening to Indian music . |
22 | There were a range of meetings , some private meetings with district councils when they 've given the opportunity to discuss issues erm themselves , and quite clearly our members did in fact look at a whole range of projections before coming to a final view . |