Example sentences of "be look at [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 said she phoned me the night before last and she said she 's been looking at flats I thought I 'd just ring you to tell you we 've been looking at flats and they range from two hundred and fifty to four hundred and eighty pounds a week for a flat
2 said she phoned me the night before last and she said she 's been looking at flats I thought I 'd just ring you to tell you we 've been looking at flats and they range from two hundred and fifty to four hundred and eighty pounds a week for a flat
3 Why you been looking at bathrooms this morning ?
4 of done Quickspend , you 'd have been looking at figures that showed a lot more profitability .
5 He added , ‘ Have you been looking at birds ?
6 So far we have been looking at earthworks particular to deserted settlement sites .
7 Such proposals are naturally a major source of controversy between the political parties but some local authorities have undoubtedly been looking at charges with a fresh eye in recent years .
8 Been looking at sinks again .
9 Operations manager Siobhan Hunter , who is responsible for the Morgan Grenfell contract , says : ‘ We 've been looking at computers for the past 18 months , and we went for Caterdata , having seen it in action at BE Services , the in-house caterer at the Bank of England . ’
10 Have you been looking at cloud-shapes ? ’
11 At the University of Ghana , Dr Samuel Sefa-Dedeh has been looking at ways of increasing the productivity of grain legumes in the tropics .
12 The number of people who die from the habit is increasing every year , and a special conference has been looking at ways of tackling the problem .
13 Borough councillors heard yesterday that 1992 is Car Crime Prevention Year and officers had been looking at ways of getting the message across .
14 Council officers have also been looking at playgrounds in the Witham area .
15 We are looking at options which will almost certainly include a Nasdaq listing .
16 It means that psychoanalysis takes a lot longer , because you are looking at defences and ego as well as at , at the .
17 In other words you are looking at actions .
18 ‘ But we are looking at others too ; there are lots of candidates out there and we need to conclude something this year . ’
19 Fundraisers are looking at sites in North Wales to house the proposed hospice , which will serve children from the area as well as Merseyside and the Isle of Man .
20 An important qualification is that we are looking at groups of professionals and the manner in which they are organised rather than at individual teachers — at this latter level there can be little doubt that many individual teachers do respond to client needs despite the structure around them .
21 The crucial thing to remember in all this is that you are looking at birds and getting out and about in the countryside — the birds may just be the excuse — because you enjoy it , not to pass an " A " level .
22 So , because of the fierce competition , a number of houses are looking at gimmicks to try to bring their new authors to the fore .
23 Oh , that too erm that we are , had , if we are saying that this evening we are looking at communications and different elements of it , I think this is an area which if ever there was an example of how perhaps not to do it how to blow it askew , it 's probably the best one we 've had in , in decades .
24 ‘ The problem is that the judges are looking at extremes — maybe comparing an ad selling commemorative medals of the election with one featuring designer Christmas cards .
25 Whenever we are looking at children 's writing , it 's a high priority to respond to the content , but this can sometimes be difficult ; children themselves often become over-anxious about the surface features of their writing and frightened of making mistakes .
26 But we are looking at charities from the institutional end of the business , not the private client end ’ .
27 When we look at circumstances in the past , and see the patterns of support between kin which prevailed at any given point , we are looking at situations very different from our own in important and relevant ways .
28 It should be remembered that in this chapter we are dealing only with stress within the word ; this means that we are looking at words as they are said in isolation , which is a rather artificial situation — we do not often say words in isolation , except for a few such as ‘ yes ’ , ‘ no ’ , ‘ possibly ’ , ‘ please ’ and interrogative words such as ‘ what ’ , ‘ who ’ , etc. , but looking at words in isolation does help us to see stress placement and stress levels more clearly than studying them in the context of continuous speech .
29 Thus we are looking at polynomials such as unc For two such polynomials ( a , 0 , … ) and ( b , 0 , … ) we note that , according to 1.6.1 , their sum and product are respectively ( a + b , 0 , … ) and ( a.b , 0 , … ) .
30 We are looking at ways to develop this as well as ways to ensure that groups are kept informed of any activity in their area .
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