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

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1 The physical and analytical chemistry department at DSM has looked at the distribution and migration of salts in limestone .
2 ‘ What happened , ’ says an attendant parent , ‘ is that our defence stopped to look at the train .
3 The authorities promised to look into the complaints in order to defuse the situation .
4 Whatever their own political persuasions , journalists tend to look for the most interesting outcome of any given set of circumstances .
5 This chapter has looked at the importance of temporary jobs as a source of flows both from unemployment into employment and from employment into unemployment .
6 This chapter has looked at the main academic and political perspectives which have shaped thinking on health and health care .
7 For more weeks than I care to remember I have been working on a Panorama programme designed to look at the future of the Tory Party , even beyond Thatcherism .
8 It is primarily by the spreading of awareness of foreign legal systems among our students that we can hope to accelerate the process of harmonization and to produce practitioners and judges of the future prepared to look beyond the horizon of their own legal system .
9 Ellen turned to look at the rapidly disappearing Dream Baby .
10 Well I think it 's very important Robert because , I mean as the charter for the arts indicated look at the money that local authorities are spending upstairs to us and really you know we , we are
11 This small-scale study aims to look at the impacts of deregulation of passenger transport in the United States and to examine the way that transport suppliers have responded to the new environment .
12 Yesterday we won a vital victory in having Attorney General Sir Nicholas Lyell agree to look at the case .
13 I like it when when wh it floods in town and you can go down and watch foreigners standing looking at the roofs of their cars floating down the Ouse and you think Yeah ! .
14 Traditionally pacifists had looked to the evolution of a transnational civil society and the gradual withering away of the nation state as the key to human progress — a view elaborated most influentially by Richard Cobden .
15 No Swindon fan likes looking at the league table just now but the Hammers have lost their last two and let in seven goals
16 Donna sat looking at the box for long moments .
17 Molly stood looking at the lapping water with Ken Corduroy , expert on garden pools and pergolas , who had arrived quite unexpectedly in his Volvo estate .
18 Empires have been built and fortunes acquired during the Eighties , and most ‘ lazy ’ journalists have looked to the States to explain the phenomenon .
19 Edinburgh District Council have been consulted and officials from their Planning Department have looked at the route and agreed that it has good potential .
20 Edinburgh District Council have been consulted and officials from their Planning Department have looked at the route and agreed that it has good potential .
21 The recession has exacerbated this problem to such an extent that the Metropolitan Police has a Fraud Squad division detailed to look at the issue .
22 the situa , perhaps it 's worth outlining how Litchfield came to look at the new settlement option , because it has some relevance to York
23 As usual they walked past the toy shop and Pete stopped to look in the window .
24 ‘ Now I 'm in the voucher scheme I feel safer knowing that the council has looked at the people it employs , and if there 's any difficulty I can go to Joan [ the manager ] . ’
25 East Devon District Council has looked at the paperwork and has realized that the Community Council is going to match anything that they give , so I 've spoken to their recycling officer and he thinks that the way the budget is , we 're very likely to get one of the containers from them , which would be matched by another from the Community Council .
26 Details emerged when United 's new owners Bio Mass Recycling started looking into the clubs records and came across payments for seventy thousand pounds .
27 Britain became involved with cable early on , the first worthwhile trial being that ‘ … carried out in 1838 by Brooke , an Englishman , across the river Hoohley in India ’ .3 Even as early as 1840 a House of Commons committee had looked into the possibility of connecting Dover with Calais .
28 Benny had looked at the cream-coloured blouses and soft pink angora sweaters .
29 To meet the needs of piston-engine operators worldwide , a small number of specialist concerns thrive looking after the precious radial engine that go a long way towards making the DC-3 and DC-6 such economic miracle workers .
30 Mr Hill said : ‘ Mr McGregor appreciated something was not right but had no more time than a split second to begin to look round the corner of his chair when he was struck two extremely heavy blows to the base of his skull and the back of his neck by this defendant wielding a heavy fire extinguisher .
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