Example sentences of "[adj] need look " in BNC.

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1 As for general design , cuffs storm flaps , pockets and parts of the hood all need looking at .
2 At the operational level planning tasks will be simpler and there is less need to look for complex procedures as it would be like using a sledgehammer to crack a nut .
3 Sir : If one wants to understand the reasons for growing public concern about the police one need look no further than the letter from the Police Federation ( 28 September ) .
4 Mr Cheung wrote : ‘ It is easy to find conclusive evidence showing that both nectar and pollination services are transacted in the marketplace : in some cities one need look no further than the yellow pages of the local telephone directory . ’
5 For a typical candidate , one need look no further than Keith Hill , bidding to take Streatham from the Tories .
6 This has since been employed in the wide variety of commercial designs that have arrived following the introduction of the Hawaiian ; but for a simple and long-standing development one need look no further than Top of The Line 's own ‘ Spin-Off ’ .
7 For sheer brilliance one need look no further than the early Prokofiev Toccata , its cascades of notes played with furious energy and incisive clarity , or the Poulenc Presto , taken at a breathtaking speed and displaying the most astonishing Fingerfertigkeit .
8 If one is seeking an example of a naval battle which was to have consequences , one need look no further than this one .
9 One need look no further than s 1a of the Commodity Exchange Act in the US and Sched 1 to the Financial Services Act 1986 in the UK ( FSA ) , to find two very different monuments to the difficulty of the task .
10 Indeed , for examples of foregrounding sharpening and guiding one 's reading of a text one need look no further than Blake 's own analysis : " This structure suggests that parallelism and contrast may well form important attributes of the passage " ( p. 17 ) ; " The end of each line seems a little more powerful as that pattern is disrupted " ( p. 27 ) ; " The metre used in a poem sets up an expectation on the part of the reader or listener that the pattern will be preserved throughout the poem .
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