Example sentences of "look again [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 A reconstruction of the concert formed a centrepiece of Manchester 's Festival of Expressionism , which has looked again at the German and Austrian blossoming that anticipated the dominant issues of 20th-century culture .
2 Erm , we have looked again at the programme for building this road .
3 The verdict was suicide , but many people thought he was murdered , and this series looks again at the evidence — although as usual the final verdict is left to the viewer .
4 Looking again at the words he had written he realized that his face was once more tightening , his lips once again curling .
5 He hesitated for a moment as to what to do ; then looking again at the woman at the table , who was now smiling at him , he sat down in the chair , and for the next ten minutes he listened to the banter between the two of them .
6 Looking again at the case of the Belfast inner-city speakers whose network patterns were compared , it is evident that relative to a person who , for example , had changed jobs and houses several times , their networks were all closeknit .
7 The Clinton administration is said to be looking again at the tangible objectives underlying the federal government 's support for research ( see page 776 ) , while the British government , in the shape of the Department of Trade and Industry , is seeking a more direct ( if a more avuncular than the American ) role in fostering industrial competitiveness .
8 The Government is looking again at the payments system to try and resolve it and the Town 's MP recognises there is a problem .
9 As the budget looms , the chancellor seems to be looking again at the feasibility of raising money for the government , by ending the tax relief on mortgages of up to thirty thousand pounds .
10 Mr Brunhead , who represented Thames Transit Limited stated that the City Council could just be proud of what it had done , for public transport , and he was aware that the city council was looking again at the balanced transport policy , and ways of making the city centre more viable for bus and for public transport .
11 AMERICAN scientists have found an effect that may cast doubt on a whole body of research in the evolution of the Solar System , as well as making physicists look again at the subject of isotopes , forms of the same element that differ in the number of neutrons in the nucleus .
12 I would look again at the Gatso experiment to question its benefit in moving traffic efficiently around London .
13 It makes one look again at the plants in one 's garden and wonder what secret messages are being passed in ways too subtle for our human senses to grasp .
14 But let us look again at the quirky , fortuitous way in which evolution favours particular phenotypes .
15 Let us look again at the sentence that was cited earlier :
16 I hope that the Secretary of State will look again at the figures , instead of looking at them superficially as he has done , to see that , in the past five years , the incidence of passenger train collisions has increased by 40 per cent .
17 I will look again at the point made by the hon. Member for Greenock and Port Glasgow .
18 We have also decided that we will look again at the costs of refurbishment .
19 They should look again at the literature , and they should listen to their patients .
20 And he said that he hoped manufacturers would look again at the instructions to see whether they could be made clearer .
21 And heavens knows , once launched it 's all too hard to turn back and look again for the missed trace .
22 I enter the day and date in my diary and look again at the entry of the 12th June .
23 Now look again at the list — what would you like to do more of ?
24 0–2 ticks You are naturally a bit anxious about life — look again at the particular areas you ticked .
25 You may object that I 'm only describing the kind of action that occurs in whodunnit stories — but look again at the short fictions that have moved you .
26 If that does n't work , look again at the word , and say it in a way that will remind you of how it is spelled : say Wed-nes-day ; clim-bed , and pronounce the bits separately ; but remember how the word really sounds .
27 Our discussion of this toc is very limited , though we look again at the subject , also briefly , in 2.10 .
28 Look again at the exchanges in Task 12 , and at the contexts you invented for them .
29 Look again at the conversations in Task 17 .
30 Look again at the first version of the witness ' testimony and answer the question : What did she eat for breakfast ?
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