Example sentences of "look out [prep] the [noun sg] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Yet Mrs Blakey continued to sense the unease she 'd been aware of on the telephone , which she 'd first of all sensed when she 'd looked out of the landing window and seen the boy with the children in the garden .
2 Except that in that case Timmy would n't be Timmy , and the thought that there might be no Timmy , that there might be some other person altogether occupying his space in the world , fills me with terror , as if I had looked out of the bedroom window and found the solid earth beneath the house had disappeared .
3 It 's tempting to stop at every village you come across on your travels — at Spili , we paused to drink from a Venetian fountain where stone lionheads spouted clear spring mountain water ; at Preveli we visited the famous monastery which looks out to the south coast ; driving through the Psiloritis mountains we braved the wind to climb down the Kourtaliotiko Gorge and saw the tiny church of St Nicolas .
4 Below the attics was a back bedroom looking out over the flower garden , and so on to the main road beyond .
5 He was looking out over the prison courtyard , watching the sheets of rain falling , the brightness of the observation lights along the prison walls reflecting in his eyes .
6 Wycliffe-went to the window and stood looking out over the roof tops to the harbour and Albert Pier .
7 Thomas Sachs was looking out of the back window .
8 I saw a man with a large black beard looking out of the taxi window .
9 It was a pity that the weather was so bad , Robbie thought , looking out of the surgery window .
10 Stephen stood with Jonadab , looking out of the parlour window , watching the teams criss-crossing the fields , with ploughs behind them .
11 Looking out of the bedroom window , Elizabeth saw Bob Lamb the shepherd walking with his dog down the track from the high moor .
12 Looking out of the car window , we notice that the storm is over and already the streets are dry again .
13 On the top floor she stood looking out of the dormer windows across the London skyline , and then downwards through the burgeoning green tracery of sycamore trees to where daffodils were blooming and a woman and a child were feeding some pigeons .
14 Having to hold the button down all the time made it a bit awkward for looking out of the side window , but by craning her neck she could just manage to see the hole to the rear of the craft .
15 Wycliffe glanced back at the house and again saw the seated figure in the upstairs room , but now he had the impression that the figure was facing him , looking out of the side window .
16 Looking out across the headland Rickards said : ‘ He 's out there somewhere , watching , waiting .
17 The luncheon took place in a giant marquee with windows looking out across the polo field .
18 The windows were tall and mullioned , looking out onto the courtyard Harry had crossed earlier , with the top panels stained purple and gold to match the colours of the school .
19 And er bit misty , but that 's looking out from the signal box , you can just , possibly just about make out there , and at the back erm the er er with the the erm station master 's house etcetera .
20 Fighting the Empire you have to look out for the Helblaster volley gun .
21 To look out on the night sky with modern eyes is like looking about one in a trackless forest — trees forever and no horizon .
22 It would be rude to look out of the car windows
23 He climbed the stairs , paused for a moment to look out of the landing window at the bay in sunshine , then continued on up .
24 As the train slows down considerably on the bend , look out beyond the Castoff Carpet Centre ( formerly Watley Baptist Chapel ) over the spire of Saint Greavsies and you may be able to spot the rusty corrugated sheeting , glistening muddily in the sunlight , that makes up the ground 's perimeter fencing .
25 Oh yeah often used to get up in the morning and look out of the bedroom window and see a pheasant in the back garden
26 Look out for the Animateur sign in the brochure , it means a related theatre workshop is being offered free of charge , to any school making a block booking .
27 Look out for the kissing gate on your right and go through it on the path heading to the lake which passes through Long How Wood .
28 Look out for the grid reference which appears in each accommodation entry .
29 Look out for the CET range of products , including an ingenious rubber bone called The Dental Kong , £10 , and the Nylabone dental range , £2-£4 , available from better pet shops and veterinary centres .
30 Look out for the CPAV SOS package .
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