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How To Use Look away In A Sentence

  • Don't look away while I am taking your photograph.
  • Her gaze is so incredibly direct, so unyielding, that he just has to look away. CLOUD DANCING • by J. Thomas Arant
  • She would not look away from it, she would not look into the dark depths of the Prince's eyes.
  • Everytime you raise up your head unmindfully, you see me watching you. As soon as our sights join, I bury my head and look away as if nothing had happened.
  • I love it when I catch you looking at me then you smile and look away.
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  • Gunners fans may want to look away now! The Sun
  • He smiled and forced himself to look away as he began to towel himself dry.
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • When he sang all looked at him and could not look away, for such was the beauty of his voice and face.
  • Jill's eyes misted over, so she forced herself to look away.
  • David had to look away from the screen to pacify the faint nauseating feeling that was rising from his stomach.
  • They shared their gaze for a moment longer and then Gwenddien managed to look away, returning once again to the distaff.
  • For those of a sensitive disposition, look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • The blistering heat and intense flash made Joel look away for a second.
  • The bright light made her look away.
  • Her mom continued to regard Vicki with a softer version of the smile, which made Vicki look away and her lips droop downward.
  • Vertigo sufferers should look away now, or at least hold on to the edge of the sofa. The Sun
  • At one point, during a mention of me in the conversation, she turned and frankly looked back at me over her wire-rimmed spectacles, but before I could look away, she smiled warmly, then returned her attention to Mr. Soper. Deadly
  • Not in a loud and strident way; just enough to look away. Times, Sunday Times
  • Eyes round as saucers, he didn't even pretend to look away - he found the view too irresistible.
  • A single tear escaped from the corner of her eye but she made no move to look away.
  • I want to look away and give my credit card a break, buuut I saw a few more bks to add to my TBR pile *cries* I just finished Covet, I miss the BDB. New Releases, Author News & More - 9/29/09
  • Not doing anything is doing something and choosing to look away is a passive but no less mortal sin. Bill Maher 
  • If you have young adult offspring, you may wish to look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • Elaka gazed at Dax with pure spite, and the Trill made it a point not to look away. Antimatter
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not in a loud and strident way; just enough to look away. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have to look away as he launches his sinewy body onto her hard surface and disappears into the sunrise. Times, Sunday Times
  • Vertigo sufferers should look away now, or at least hold on to the edge of the sofa. The Sun
  • The prudish and squeamish might want to look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then look away now as these snaps will leave you feeling twitchy. The Sun
  • Viewed in the context of late-19th-century conventions, many of these works convey an almost frathouse bawdiness, as the artists defiantly strip and dare their public not to look away. Modernism's Austrian Rebels
  • A cat will say ‘hello’ with a slow blink, the polite cat will look away after it has blinked.
  • Such days in childhood were worse, in their way, than those long dark nights are now, those nights when you realize something about yourself and, no matter how many DVDs you slide into the player, you can't look away from that realization and there's nothing you can do but sit in a buzzingly empty room and study it, study yourself, your lacks. 9/11/06
  • We instinctively look away from the Gorgon and toward the Scriptures for our understanding.
  • Me still being the modest girl I motion for Stewart to look away while I disrobed my rain soaked clothes.
  • But I'd always look away from the sparkling party and see a thin girl leaning on the doorpost, her eyes hidden under shadows and watching me with a longing gaze.
  • He saw Ann look away from him and leave his field of vision.
  • With a supreme effort of will, I manage to look away from the large mirror.
  • As he looked at her he recognized that he had not at all overrated Veronica's desirability: he found he almost needed to look away. DARE CALL IT TREASON
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • So horrible you have to look away... and yet your eyes keep sneaking back. Times, Sunday Times
  • However, it is no longer possible to look away from the fact that the options and mobility available to my generation -- Steve's generation -- came at an unacceptable cost to other beings, human and non-human. Wendi L. Adamek: Life's Best Inventions
  • Look at a bright light and look away, and you see the negative image of it.
  • His dark eyes lock on to yours as he talks, to the extent that you feel it would be disrespectful to look away, and he considers every answer carefully before responding to the question.
  • A mere eight years after Sebald voiced grave concerns about Germany's propensity to repress the past, to always be ‘looking and looking away at the same time,’ it is now no longer possible to look away.
  • The swaggies always look away, or down; their hats are visors, and he never sees the colour of a swaggie's eyes.
  • I wouldn't have been able to look away if terrorists were bombarding the room and announcing the end of the world, I was that enraptured.
  • The same courage that moved the great poet to write in his own vernacular tongue, instead of in Latin, emboldened the artists to look away from the received standards, and to follow nature. Outline of Universal History
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • Well, in situations like this, i'll just push my hand through and grab the pole, and then look away disinterestedly as the person who is leaning on the pole turns around to look at me.
  • For those of a sensitive disposition, look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • But, I also admit to once having seen my advisor's paystub on his desk (he had given me and most of his advisees a set of keys), and I didn't look away. That StatCounter Paradox
  • Those with an aversion to sickly sentiment should look away now.
  • The politically correct should look away now. Times, Sunday Times
  • They will look away in shame as the one-legged man outdrinks the whole party.
  • I suddenly feel embarrassed at appearing intrusive and nosy and I hook my own hair behind my ears and look away.
  • People turn their carts around at the supermarket and look away from me at the bank.
  • Some spectators were unsure whether to look away or to keep watching in ghoulish fascination. Times, Sunday Times
  • Well, Pete, this is a little tricky, and anyone with even a mild allergy to stats should look away now.
  • And - something else most journalists should know - quite often you look away for a moment and pow, there it is on the front page with standardised spelling.
  • These people make eye contact with us or look away, often assuming poses and facial expressions found in earlier traditions of portraiture.
  • I hear a sharp indrawn breath and I look away from inside myself to see Sam looking anaemic, her colour is so pale.
  • Even among us humans, we can train ourselves to look away, to not see, to not hear, to not notice the blazingly obvious statements of people who, whether we like it or not, really believe in God.
  • As soon as our gaze locked, I knew that I couldn't look away; I didn't want to.
  • This is a train wreck of a movie, but it takes itself so seriously and it is so cloyingly Shaqcentric that it is nearly impossible to look away. Shaq’s Steel on DVD - The Retroist
  • Anyone who doesn't wish to know the function of a raddle in the insemination of sheep had better look away now. Hill Farm by Miranda France – review
  • Euphemisms," Mr. de Baca said, "give us an excuse to look away. Katherine Gustafson: Retail Takes on Slavery: The Body Shop Fights Child Sex Trafficking
  • So horrible you have to look away... and yet your eyes keep sneaking back. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was unnerving how bright they shone and so I tried to look away.
  • Look away from a mirror-flat fiord reflecting a mound of clouds, and when you turn back there may be milky waters below a snow-capped mountain streaked with sunlight. So Far, So Good

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