We have no meanings for "look outwards" in our records yet.
1 The hollow orbits in those marble heads look outwards with dried darkness.
2 She then places a candle at the north and pauses to look outwards , saying:
3 They look outwards and want to be world-level car designers.
4 You are convinced that worshippers of a personal God look outwards and are progressive; I congratulate them.
5 But if the prize wants to look outwards and engage with the real world, then its arbiters need look no further.
6 It would be easy not to look outwards at all -our capital city is a comfortable puddle for a novelist.
7 Australian English came into its own, so that now we have our own internal language standards without having to look outwards across the globe.
8 But instead of looking towards the cathedral, as all the city should, they look outwards at a pagan entrenchment, as the city should not.
9 A dog stands at the window of an apartment, looking outwards .
10 Mouth roundish, irregular, contracted: looking outwards , and a little downwards.
11 Mouth looking outwards and forwards, triangular, with a short blunt tooth on the external angle.
12 Then, rather than looking outwards into the further reaches of the world, he looks emphatically inwards.
13 Helen, in her turn, looked outwards .
14 Her latest looks outwards .
15 Jamaica has a relatively small domestic market, which means we must always be looking outwards to expand and grow, he said.
16 "I mean," said Mary, "they are the kind that look outwards and get interested in the world.
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