1313 collocations for looks

Usually the well-to-do farmer is very conservative, looks askance at the very advanced opinions of the young radicals, but a complete change had come over them.

But Nicholas rejoined them, silent, looking very grave.

The charming Miss S. didn't say anything, but she smiled, and looked such unutterable things from behind the blinds, that I expect to find it all in the bill.

The statement that "HARPER is disfigured for life," goes for nothing with us, as that depends altogether on what sort of looking man he was previous to the removal of his features by means of a dental apparatus.

I wish I could draw him for you as he stands yonder looking the picture of good health, good spirits, and good-humour.

It has made me ambitious to look my best, do my best and be my best.

But I was not looking their way, but at the girl who sat on my host's right hand, and in whose dark eyes I thought I saw a spark of recognition.

He looked at the dogs a good deal, and then would look at the Boy, but he could never catch his eye.

Susan woke and looked out the window and said, "Bless my buttons there is a real little garden.

I looked the place out last evening, and if you've done sleeping, we'll have some sport.

That We must not look a Gift-horse in the Mouth 296 441 XII.

" They approached over the mossy turf, and presently Paul looked upa strong face, stern and self-contained; the face of a man who would always have a purpose in life, who would never be petty in thought or deed.

There I see my father's kindly smile so full of blessing, hardworking, rough-handed man he was, maybe, but able to look the whole world in the face....

Then, looking death in the face, Lefty plunged into the great darkness.

" I noticed that several of them were looking daggers at me.

OSWALD Ay, look up Cast round you your mind's eye, and you will learn Fortitude is the child of Enterprise: Great actions move our admiration, chiefly Because they carry in themselves an earnest That we can suffer greatly.

AS VERBAL CELIBATES What Words to Learn First The Analysis of Your Own Vocabulary Exercise The Definition of Words Exercise How to Look up a Word in the Dictionary Exercise Prying into a Word's Past Exercise V. INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS MEMBERS OF VERBAL FAMILIES Words

Every day brings a ship, Every ship brings a word; Well for those who have no fear, Looking seaward well assured That the word the vessel brings Is the word they wish to hear.

"He has a fine imagination, and, from what you tell me, it seems that I should have looked a fool had I gone out to South America on such an errand.

As a very humble student of this subject, I may say that I have been looking these facts in the face earnestly enough for more than twenty years, and that I am about as certain that they can only be explained by ice, as I am that my having got home by rail can only be explained by steam.

But bless me, how little you look!

Finally your bear or your opponent in politics is treed and the dogs are trying to climb the tree, and your bear or your political opponent is up on a limb snarling and showing his teeth at the dogs or the politicians, and then you ride up, look the ground over, wait till your heart stops beating and fire the shot at a vital part, and your bear or your political opponent comes tumbling to the ground.

They'd twist the thing into so many shapes that not one of us would ever again dare to look a friend in the eye.

Louise, plump and gay, already looked a little woman; Madeleine, slim and pretty, spent hours at her piano, her eyes full of dreaminess; Marguerite, whose nose was rather too large and whose lips were thick, had beautiful golden hair.

His limbs looked quite shrunk and powerless, as he rested his head on the table before him, and murmured incoherently from time to time, 'My own child!

1313 collocations for  looks