Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] look at [art] " in BNC.

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1 I better look at the ones you found , then . ’
2 I do n't remember the paper I only look at the front and the back on a Friday , well pick it up and have a look
3 Then she asked what had happened to Alec , because nobody had told her , and I just looked at a spot about a foot above her head and let Frank do the dirty work .
4 There 's a serious , a serious side Lord Mayor , to that greeting cos I just looked at the number of companies that are owned this shareholders scheme that they like to promote , the number of companies that 're owned by foreign nationals .
5 I just looked at the man , I thought , I oh god I ca n't cope with this !
6 No I just looked at the clock that was all it was
7 I just look at the aircraft and wonder ‘ Is this one going to stay up there ’ .
8 I just look , I just look at the shelves and I look to see what they 've got and
9 But whenever I am in the United States , or near an American Center in Kyoto , Paris or Seoul , I always look at the Washington , DC telephone directory and seek out Dana 's name , address and number .
10 I always look at the houses as I walk by them .
11 I always look at the houses as I walk past , and I see a lot of things odder than that , but it 's not my business , is it ?
12 I also looked at the painted surface .
13 Sir Henry and I both looked at the picture .
14 During painting , I often look at the picture through a mirror as it progresses , and sometimes even just after I 've drawn it , just to see if anything does n't quite look OK .
15 I then looked at the section of the report headed ’ Economic Impact ’ where there was nothing at all about the damage to the coal industry .
16 Well I never look at the adverts do I ?
17 When Nan rushed in , pulling her hat and coat off as she came in , she laughingly looked at the clock and said , ‘ Made it all but a minute , miss .
18 But if you just looked at the work he 's been churning out lately , without knowing anything about his business activities , you 'd wonder what had happened to him .
19 The experiments are not particularly relevant to anything , they 're just experiments for experiment 's sake , one experiment illustrating a particular bit of theory ; it does n't do anything particularly useful , you just look at an oscilloscope and take some readings and hence you can demonstrate this bit of theory .
20 If you just look at the er the sheet , that we 've handed out , they loaded from er from the computer it 's that data that 's in front of you , right , we 've got three , three series , right , it 's times data , right , from nineteen twenty three to nineteen forty five , right and the three variables are , textile consumption , United States er real , sorry is benevolence of the U S , so it 's textile consumption , capita , real income er per capita income to be adjusted through inflation , so constant money terms and what the relative price of textiles P erm the price of textiles relative to the general level er the general price level .
21 Right with those parameters , so if you just look at the er coefficional income , if we estimate the coefficional income to be nought point five right , over the entire sample , the then subsequently find out if that coefficient varies from year to year from minus six plus ten , right , having a one point estimate , right , er oh that coefficient is not going to be particularly useful to us , we want to know er whether our coefficients remain reasonably constant throughout our sample period , particularly if we 're using this er equation to make out of sample predictions , right .
22 Right , so normally we , you know , we want to be reasonably confident , right , so we want to have a reasonably small significance level we do n't want that significance level to be too small , otherwise the power of the test will diminish very rapidly so we normally use the ten or the five percent , five percent level and if you just look at the er the five percent column , right , overall realistic sample sizes , right , from a hundred and twenty down to , to about twenty , I , those T ratios were the critical value they are all about two and that 's why we say you can have a T ratio of about greater than two , then you can be at least ninety five percent confident about your inference .
23 That 's part of the trouble , part of why he is so lonely , but she just looked at the carpet in silence , at the dark place where Luke had once spilled black coffee .
24 She always looked at every farthing twice before parting with it .
25 Have you ever looked at a coke fire ? the coke fire has been banked up with only a limited supply of air .
26 Well , have you ever looked at the yarn mast and tension spring ?
27 ‘ Have you ever looked at the design of the Wheel — before it 's been dressed up ? ’
28 If you have a majority of ticks here , you appreciate and enjoy the natural world , but you also look at the way that animals and plants can serve human beings .
29 But if you look at the low-risk a aspect of a P E P and you also look at the low charges , it 's got to be worth looking at , and certainly in terms of spread for Miss , worth erm worth considering , I mean she 'd be er a perfect investor for that .
30 If you now look at the table , you 'll see that that 's made out of three thousand two hundred for concealed households .
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