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

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1 Before she left the party , she must look for the witch 's hat .
2 I have n't found any , I must look for the instructions , I
3 First , we must look at the present .
4 I do n't think we should look for fundamental changes now but we must look at the configuration of services
5 To explore this more thoroughly we must look at the changes in the social relations of cultural production which came with these new technologies .
6 Really the Council is in a position where it must act upon complaint , and it must look at the complaints and comments that 's been received .
7 We look at the sun through smoked glass ; we must look at the past through coloured glass .
8 Thus the examiner must look at the bottom of the page as well as the top in order to find his way to the new question .
9 In order to assess the children 's lighting needs , teachers must look at the tasks that are to be performed , such as moving around , close and distance work , and see how each child performs in different lighting conditions , then adapt accordingly .
10 I ’ Clubs must look at the players they are registering and decide if they are the type we want in the League , ’ he said .
11 The Court of Appeal said that the court must look at the wording and surrounding circumstances to find out what interest the clause was intended to protect .
12 To overcome this barrier , I suggest , one must look at the approach in action ; only then will it be possible to see what it has achieved , and to assess what it might achieve if taken on its own terms .
13 Before we turn to that material we must look at the course the narrative has taken since the beginning of Genesis , reminding ourselves yet again of familiar events , and skimming through areas we have not looked at so far .
14 We must look at the behaviour from a properly defined structural viewpoint .
15 Even if it were true , as some scientific students of law believe , that a past service can not support a future promise , you must look at the document and see if the promise can not receive a proper effect in some other way .
16 In order to ascertain whether or not a particular trust is or is not charitable you must look at the preamble to the statute of Elizabeth I , the Charitable Uses Act 1601 and the classification by Lord Macnaghten in Commissioners for the Special Purposes of Income Tax v. Pemsel and the reported cases generally .
17 One must look at the quality of life that diabetics and their carers have .
18 First we must look at the situation in Vietnam .
19 " First you must look at the pictures .
20 To describe how arithmetic is performed on the IBM 1401 , we must look at the representation of characters a little more closely .
21 Then before each row of the circular rows , they must look at the side lever of the main carriage that is nearest the knitting .
22 We must look at the fear with our eyes and heart , and begin to bring calm to the storm of our emotions .
23 The court must look at the words used in the statute , which may impose an absolute , strict or fault based standard .
24 We must look at the standards and work in schools from an objective standpoint , and that should involve some outsiders , which means non-educationists , looking , inspecting and reporting .
25 First of all we must look at the importance of exercise in relation to our health .
26 If we wish to query the validity of his data we must look at the methods employed in collecting data on various aspects of population which go into his publications .
27 In which case , we must look at the books evidence on both matters , as well as on such matters as the prisoners previous links with the IRA — which in most cases amounted to none — and wether the IRA lauds them as its own .
28 He also assessed that the BSP could no longer claim to be a party of the working class , but must look to the intelligentsia and young people as its main constituency .
29 It is important to understand that the ratio decidendi of a particular case is not wholly to be found in the case itself ; rather one must look to the way in which later courts interpret the case .
30 One must look to the contract as a whole to identify the kind of goods that the seller was agreeing to sell and the buyer to buy … where , as in the instant case , the sale ( to use the words of s13 ) is " by sample as well as by description " , characteristics of the goods which would be apparent on reasonable examination of the sample are unlikely to have been intended by the parties to form part of the " description " by which the goods were sold , even though such characteristics are mentioned in references in the contract to the goods that are its subject matter .
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