Example sentences of "[adv] [v-ing] at [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Then she added : ‘ He definitely shapes up better looking at him like a Bill Clinton character .
2 Her pulses were racing , her throat felt tight , just looking at him across a crowded street …
3 ‘ I was just looking at you against the lights of the city , ’ she says .
4 It 's just looking at it in a slightly different way and trying , I 've done some things there to show you a , a sort of a system to use , use your own if you like but I want to see what comes in , what goes out , every time energy changes from one form into another form .
5 He was still gazing at her across the warm fog of the coffee bar .
6 She 's still staring at me like an animal .
7 Dann turned the gun in his hands , still staring at it in the passing flares of street lighting .
8 ‘ You said they were always yelling at you from the fields , and brandishing sticks . ’
9 She was not now looking at him as a child looked .
10 His life would be a charade , for every time he took her in his arms he would see the face of the girl now smiling at him in a way which lit fires in his heart .
11 Nor is it simply looking at them with no further end in mind , which might be the listless action of someone who can think of nothing else to do .
12 I stood there staring at it for a moment , unable to believe what I saw .
13 The Grand National course narrows approaching the winning post and bends round to the left immediately after , and with crowds manically screaming at him in the stands and on both rails and directly in front of him it would hardly be surprising if Devon Loch had suddenly been startled by the deafening noise .
14 She sees that Harriet is quietly gazing at her in the red firelight .
15 ‘ A friend of mine , Anthony Cherry , who produces Prime Time for the BBC , saw in this some journalistic potential and is currently looking at it for the BBC programme 40 Minutes ’ , says Hewitt . ’
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