Example sentences of "to look at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Before you make up your mind , you should aim to look at a variety of plans .
2 counselling er , and it follows directly from what was said , erm , Judy has referred in her talk about the importance of communications with members , and I 'm delighted to note , that erm , the Health and Disability Group , is to have a meeting in January to look at a variety of issues including the health work of N C V O. This is the first meeting for I think , two years , and if it new era in communications , I for one am delighted .
3 ‘ A number of district officers have been asked to look at a variety of projects across the service , ’ he said .
4 I want you to look at a cow now .
5 But Strasbourg 's anti-nicotine brigade has won a consolation prize : the health and social-affairs commissioner , Mrs Vasso Papandreou , has promised to look at a ban in the future .
6 Although these findings were considered in the context of differential hemispheric activation , they might more parsimoniously be thought to reflect no more than the fact that people wish to be able to look at a blackboard in the middle of the room .
7 The next day the Prince was leading a small group of businessmen he had brought over from Britain , including Stephen O'Brien , to look at a scheme called the Boston Compact , evidence that the United States had woken up sooner than anyone else to the dilemma of falling educational standards .
8 He spoke to Miss Senga who had stepped off the path to look at a snowman .
9 ‘ Now we need to look at a map , ’ said Jason .
10 You 'll have to look at a map .
11 You 'll have to look at a map , a map on the wall in the tube .
12 We used the word " profile " to indicate that we are trying to look at a shape when we are selecting people , choosing a business to take over , assessing a deal , estimating a risk .
13 You only have to look at a prole in this book and it rolls over to have its tummy tickled .
14 If you need to put in caveats , do so , and if you need time to look at a document , say so .
15 But then of course Paula was so lovely she had only to look at a boy to have him crazy about her , Sally thought wretchedly .
16 And on one occasion in the gymnasium , I turned round to look at a boy behind me and the master was there and he smacked me with the flat of his hand as hard as he could .
17 You can continue your sport the decent side of the sport without the need for the kill and and we will encourage , my motion actually encourages that , encourages the fox hunting fraternity to look at a way forward , come forward , talk to us .
18 PEOPLE travel from all over the world to look at a scrap-metal merchants in Shrewsbury .
19 Pearce lists these as two important qualities for a top manager together with being able to look at a problem and see the two or three key factors .
20 I had told him to look at a video of the race and he would see that it was through my efforts that we had won the bronze .
21 ‘ It does seem rather too much of a good thing — going to look at a waterfall in the rain , ’ remarked Lydia .
22 Last night ministers continued to look at a compromise prepared by the EC commissioner Sir Leon Brittan , incorporating a Dutch-led formula where the higher level would be the norm but governments would have the option of asking Brussels to intervene for mergers breaking £1.4bn .
23 To go back to 1700 is to look at a life that is very little different , for most men and women , from that of 1500 or even 1200 .
24 So it 's nought , point , six , two , so for our thirty seven minutes it 's , four point six , two , there we are look , but the thing is you can now do it without having to look at a scale
25 2 You are selling cars ; you have gone out to look at a customer 's part exchange .
26 Anyway , she was only going to look at a cottage .
27 Have you ever said , ‘ I think I was meant to be big ’ or ‘ I only have to look at a cream cake and I gain 2 lbs ( 0.9kg ) ’ or ‘ I ca n't diet ’ ?
28 ‘ I was a big baby — I 'm obviously meant to be this size ’ , ‘ all my family are big ’ , ‘ I 've tried every diet , they just do n't seem to work for me ’ , ‘ I only have to look at a cream cake and I gain 2lbs ( 0.9kg ) ! ’
29 We can and often should stop reasoning about art , and go instead to look at a painting , listen to some music , read a poem .
30 Such movements , however , do not necessarily and simply entail the substitution of a smaller conjugally-based family for a traditional extended family ; rather it would appear that at these times kin may take on a new significance , and that we may need to look at a network of relationships much wider than the conjugal family .
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