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How To Use Look out on In A Sentence

  • One morning the captain told us to look out on the starboard side. Times, Sunday Times
  • But that was exactly what I did, running through the shallows, splashing up onto the mudflat to a high place among the trees where I could look out on the slope that led into the watershed. The Glass Rainbow
  • But they make one hungry with an inappeasable appetite, these "Memorials of Gormandizing," bringing to mind all the beautiful dinners eaten in Latin countries, and filling the heart with longing for the hotels that look out on the Louvre at Paris, the Villa The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 118, August, 1867
  • Large windows and a full-height glazed door look out onto the outdoor space.
  • At the top, he paused to slow his breathing and to look out on to the animated, crystalline scene below him. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
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  • Look out one of the sea gulls doesn't take you for a bite of breakfast," he called jokingly after him. Sunny Boy in the Big City
  • Do we have a sudden urge to squeeze our lover when we look out on a sunset, an awe-inspiring vista or a dreamy landscape?
  • It is now more commonly seen than it used to be, because many nature reserves have hides that look out on to the muddy edges of pools. Times, Sunday Times
  • To look out on the snow during the day I know the switch has to be flicked is peaceful. 365 tomorrows » B. York : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • She buckled her seat belt and opened the window to look out on Newark at night.
  • One technique that designers often use is a series of angular walls that allow several rooms to look out on a rear view.
  • Stark paused for a moment to look out on the British sloops and transport ships in the harbor, then ran across the ridgeline of Breed's Hill toward his troops, two hundred New Hampshire militiamen.
  • In the meantime, the frustration grows as people look out on an unholy mess that seems to have been there literally forever.
  • The storm has not abated, not at all, and I look out one of the windows, and see that the snow is easily up to my waist.
  • Well look out onto the lakes, see jet-boats whizzing around; look up at the mountains, see parapenters jumping off everywhere, hang-gliders jumping off.
  • In summer, you look out on stunning Highland scenery as the beachside barbecue sizzles with freshly landed fish and seafood, not to mention some of the best sausages in Scotland.
  • And below it, a lovely Venetian window, complete with stone tracery, which used to look out on some view of the Temple of Aesculapius, perhaps; but now it is filled in by a modern window-frame which looks through the same window in the opposite direction, out into the alleyway which, perhaps, used to be a corridor. Inside, Outside, Upside Down (And Inside Out)
  • Unlike their urban brethren in, say, Chicago or Miami (who live above dry cleaning establishments in crummy neighborhoods and whose lungs would buckle if they had to breathe pure mountain air), Seattle gumshoes perch in aeries that look out on spectacular vistas.

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