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Showing results for looker-on. Search instead for lookover/noun.
Definitions

looker-on

[look-er-on, -awn] / ˌlʊk ərˈɒn, -ˈɔn /










Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“I am by nature a looker-on rather than a taker-part.”

From New York Times • Oct. 12, 2017

When he arrived in Paris, in the seventeen-forties, at the age of thirty, he was a deracinated looker-on, struggling with complex feelings of envy, fascination, revulsion, and rejection provoked by a self-absorbed élite.

From The New Yorker • Jul. 25, 2016

"Are you her," asks a looker-on, "or are you the drill?"

From The Guardian • Aug. 13, 2011

Many a Protestant looker-on was expected, if only to hear Tenor John McCormack, Papal Count, sing the Panis Angelicus of C�sar Franck.

From Time Magazine Archive

The pupil can then be taught to turn her horse to either hand, or about, at a walk, without any motion of the bridle hand perceptible to a looker-on, although perceptible enough to the horse.

From The Barb and the Bridle A Handbook of Equitation for Ladies, and Manual of Instruction in the Science of Riding, from the Preparatory Suppling Exercises by Moustache, Vielle