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"stare out" Definitions
  1. to look into somebody’s eyes for a long time until they feel embarrassed and are forced to look a way

107 Sentences With "stare out"

How to use stare out in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "stare out" and check conjugation/comparative form for "stare out". Mastering all the usages of "stare out" from sentence examples published by news publications.

You want to stare out that window all day long.
The blank eyes of women stare out from grey photographs.
We'd break out the tunes and stare out the windows.
I'll walk to the window and stare out to the world.
I'm bout to crack a brew and stare out the window.
They stare out from a boyish face, freckled and apple-cheeked.
Some were content to sit and stare out into the road.
I sit down beside it and stare out into the blue water.
You stare out of the window at the static traffic around you.
Gueldner, who has a majestic beard, goes to stare out the window.
I would stare out at it from my bedroom window and fume.
I stare out the window longing for an undamaged car and lunch.
Images of the couple still stare out from walls in the city center.
Stare out of a window during your commute instead of checking your email.
So you press the phone to your cheek, stare out the dark window.
I would only come out to stare out the peephole of my front door.
Scenes of pure destruction now stare out at us like monuments, looking quite majestic.
Four: Stare out the window as you try to make sense of it all.
Amidst the brightly-colored clutter, the tiny eyes of paper birds stare out at you.
They stand in a line and stare out into the blue expanse, into the horizon.
I find an open seat next to a window and proceed to stare out it.
They stare out at us dressed in Victorian clothes, partly obscured by hoods or unaccountable floating forms.
As I stand atop the riser, I stare out at the empty seats in front of me.
She would just stare out the window, holding onto his red jacket and wishing he'd come home.
A lot of what we do all day is wander and sit and stare out the window.
Doll-like, curvy ceramics by the Finnish artist Jenni Tuominen stare out with black dot eyes ($800).
As I stare out into his beautiful room, I see optimism, I see hope, I see the future.
Lights over ManhattanThe plane landsMy photo is taken I find my bagA taxi appearsI stare out the windowQueens.
Clams stare out of their shells, their goggle eyes bearing down on you as if they know your secrets.
In a photograph from 19893, two boys stare out from behind glass with troubled expressions that belie their ages.
I stare out the window at the passing scenery and we eat sandwiches we made that morning for our lunch.
"Everything" is what she says, looking back at her mother, whose green eyes, rimmed in red, stare out so hungrily.
Sometimes they stare out into the ocean on a long pier or stand within the ruins of an enormous pool.
Metropolitan Diary Dear Diary: We would stare out her apartment window in Hell's Kitchen, on the 14th floor facing Tenth Avenue.
Other times we'd climb an oreum, stare out at the view, talk, and sometimes do nighttime activities in the broad daylight.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads In Rabin Mondal's most iconic paintings, amphibious characters resembling frogs stare out of the canvas.
Do you have to be "on," or is it OK to stare out the window and pretend that you are not alive?
He paused every so often to stare out the window as we navigated the city, and then went back to his writing.
And as the sun rises, the citizens stare out into the empty horizon, their inner fears and aspirations crystalized by the blank canvas.
Next week, NASA is launching its new exoplanet hunter: a satellite that will stare out at the cosmos searching for never-before-seen worlds.
You make a French exit and stare out of the night bus window, tears in your eyes, lump in your throat, awash with regret.
"You could just stare out at the water all day," said Ms. Luick, who recently moved out to live with her boyfriend, David Kallaway.
I sit on the couch and review emails, but mostly just stare out the window at the trees and the hummingbirds that come around.
To sit in the gazebo and stare out at the lake bed when it's shrouded in early morning fog is profound somehow, and humbling.
Meanwhile Mao's portrait, replaced mere hours after the eggs landed and many times since, continues to stare out overChina from the Gate of Heavenly Peace.
Alves recalls how he would stare out of these windows, rather than up at them, looking down on the neighborhood as he stood his kitchen.
The lower level extends outside to the star-worthy backyard, complete with covered seating area, where the home's residents can stare out at the picturesque waterfront views.
The SUV also offers a heads-up display that places critical information (like speed) in the driver's field of view as they stare out at the road.
Give it a listen above and probably stare out of the window longingly, thinking of tins, and grass, and the smell of charred sausages in the air.
Lehnhoff, 30, also posted an image of the pair to Instagram, where they stare out over the ocean from a scenic spot along Highway 1 in California.
It was a quiet time when he could sit in the back, stare out the window at the city passing by him, and formulate a game plan.
I didn't know him ... He always stood by the fence and he would stare out and look like he was mad with the world all the time.
I didn't know him... He always stood by the fence and he would stare out and look like he was mad with the world all the time.
Humans will regularly slip the surly bonds of Earth, rocket up to inflatable space hotels, and stare out at space, up at the Moon, and down at Earth.
Fosse solved the issue of how to show the dance-hall girls drearily at work by having them stand at a railing and stare out at the audience.
Or like today, I stare out the back door at my wintry rooftop garden and think of summer tomatoes, the smell of dirt, of my father, and sob.
"I used to watch the antidepressant commercials, where people would stare out the window and say they couldn't go outside, and I'd think, That is ridiculous," she told me.
The two also hope that the show triggers some sort of memories for people—ideally, road trips where passengers stare out at nothingness with the occasional structure in decline.
Stare out a window into the rain, or peer deep into your own troubled soul, and waste the day away, as Monseré sings of the better days to come.
Why couldn't he sleep at the refurbished hotel downtown, stay up late and order a drink at the new coffee house, stare out at a town that's going places again?
Adam, who is on the far right side of the composition, and two of the goats stare out from the painting, as if we are unwanted intruders, which we are.
If there was an abrupt stillness, or if my grandmother turned to stare out the other window to avoid the ground that held her children, I missed that flinch in her.
I like this way of doing things because, during the time it takes to pour and drink it, you can relax, live, think... You can stare out at nothing and daydream.
After watching all three of these movies and reading half the first book, I still haven't the faintest idea what Christian Grey actually does, besides stare out of skyscraper windows looking troubled.
Stare out the window all you want, but no matter how hard you try to manifest better weather so you can whip out your suede sandals, you can't just will away the rain.
Extra points for weirdness: at the top right and left corners of the lower panel, two human eyes stare out with their lids partially lowered, as if bored by the gawking art lovers.
Winston and I were led to a Mashable video room, and he quickly decided that the best course of action was to sniff the entire perimeter and then stare out the glass door.
As I stare out at the Golden Scissors hairdressers over the road, a man with a beard the approximate size of a bath mat wanders past the window, laden down with blue plastic shopping bags.
On store shelves, they stare out at you by the dozens, their spines steeped in the black-white-and-red of the Nazi flag, their titles barking in Gothic type, their covers studded with swastikas.
So when she left them at night, she knew they would stare out their windows until she arrived home and waved a small lantern like a pendulum from her dark apartment to let them know.
It was particularly maddening when the train stopped without explanation and he would stare out at what looked to him like industrial wasteland, regretting every minute that he was not at home with his family.
Prosecutors said that the fleeing gunman was Mr. Howard, and that along the way he had stolen a bicycle from a man who had paused to smoke a joint and stare out at the water.
In addition to revealing that she underwent weight-loss surgery, the Empire star opens up about her bouts with depression and bulimia in This Is Just My Face: Try Not to Stare, out in stores now.
Called the Lookout at Broad Cove Marsh — after the nearby curve where locals like to park their cars and stare out over the water — the house huddles on its cliff, all but invisible from the road.
Monks in saffron robes and orange bobble hats stare out at arenas, hotels, exhibition centres and construction sites, approaching a terminal that is floodlit in red, white and blue, a top-heavy mass of concrete and shadow.
In one particularly powerful image by a Nevada prisoner named Tony, titled A Self-Portrait (below) dozens of masked, featureless prisoners stand in a cramped room with bars behind them, seeming to stare out at the drawing's viewer.
The results are more engaging than screen shots have any right to be, offering a strange sort of serenity when you pop on the VR helmet and stare out into a landscape designed to house non-stop gameplay.
Four identical young men in oversized suits stare out at us; their pupils, like shrunken prunes, beseech us with empty gazes, highlighting the apathy of the system and the lack of opportunities available to the lower-middle classes in urban India.
We paused at "Black Girl's Window," a 1969 work painted on a window that had been removed from its hinges, showing a black face, rendered as a kind of onyx silhouette, except for a pair of eyes that stare out from the painting eerily.
You can spend every second down to the last trying to figure out how the amazing technology of your predecessors worked, or you can stare out at the condemned clockwork of it all, taking in this incredible place that Mobius Digital has brought to life.
These are hours in which I am not in front of my computer, and my phone cannot be next to me ... I sit on the sofa in my room, with a pen and paper, stare out the window, and let my brain and imagination take me in the direction I need.
"I had to pay for someone else to look after my son, while I continued to stare out of the window at work wishing the day away until I could pick up my little boy, in order to basically just put him to bed on a daily basis," Jennifer told T+L.
One day I was in the studio just sitting on the couch in New York, and I couldn't... I was paralyzed somehow by the thought that it cost a thousand dollars a day to sit here on this couch, and stare out the window, and there's not even a very good view of Manhattan or anything.
Or, if you really want to enjoy splendid isolation, a reason to sit at the edge of a dock on a serene lake in Maine, to stare out at the gentle hills on the other side, and to breathe both the clean air and a sense of relief that there is no cable connection nor web service within miles.
Even after a 10-year stint as a tricorn hat–clad "junior docent" at the Gilbert Stuart Birthplace in Rhode Island, I still find myself lulled into a nearly comatose state after spending a good chunk of time among the uniformly pallid, elegantly attired men and women who stare out imperiously from within their gilded frames.
"The idea that we can author our own visual destinies, make up our own rules, turn our backs — literally — on physical limitations, is no doubt the reason that Kahlo's unflinching gaze continues to stare out from what seems like a million mood boards in a million ateliers," Lynn Yaeger, a Vogue contributor and an idiosyncratic style setter herself, writes in the book's introduction.
I've talked about women I think feeling that they're competing with porn, and I think people feel that they're competing, we're in the attention economy and sometimes you don't feel like being a hundred percent with someone because you're tired, you've had a long day at work, you just want to sit and sort of relax or stare out the window.
It is for those who, no matter how many times they may have flown, hold on to a sense of wonderment as they hurtle down the runway and watch the ground disappear beneath them; for those who cherish that sense of excitement as they descend, nose against the pane, into the blinking lights of a never-before-visited city; whose hearts leap as they stare out across an ocean and spy a lonely atoll.
After the success of the Stare-outs, Hatcher created two follow-up books, The World Stare-out Championship Final and Chang Jin-Ming's Guide to Refereeing Stare- out under the name of Chang Jin-Ming.
City in Time: Washington. New York: Sterling Publishing Company, 2008. At the nearby Washington Navy Yard at 8th Street SE and M Street SE, the ghost of Commodore Thomas Tingey is said to stare out of the upper windows of the Tingey House (the traditional residence of the Commander of the Navy Yard).Peck, Taylor.
If you asked him a simple question, he would turn away and stare out > the window. When you had about decided that he had forgotten you, he would > turn around and fix you with his big round lenses that magnified his eyes to > a slightly mad expression. Then he would grunt. Sometimes he mumbled a few > words, scarcely audible .
The first series included a series of animated sketches written and drawn by Paul Hatcher and animated by Chris Shepherd, with composition and additional animation by Rhodri Cooper and Jeff Goldner of Animation Post. "The World Stare-out Championship Final" was originally a self-published comic that Hatcher created in 1996 which Graham Linehan spotted in a comic shop in London and then contacted Hatcher with a view to using it as animated sequences in a proposed sketch show commissioned by the BBC. The animation satirised televised sporting events coverage and its over-excited commentary, inspired by events such as the World Chess Championship, boxing and the football World Cup. The sketches are set during the World Stare-out Championship Finals, a staring match which is described as a global event broadcast all over the world.
Others show portraits of their owners, and the finest are "among the most vivid portraits to survive from Early Christian times. They stare out at us with an extraordinary stern and melancholy intensity".Honour and Fleming, Pt 2, "The Catacombs" at illustration 7.7 From the 1st century AD the technique was also used for the gold colour in mosaics. Various different techniques may sometimes also be described as "gold glass".
There were no telephone wires. There were no > telephones. There was no electricity. So at a certain point they put in > these telephone poles, and you wouldn't notice them now, but when they first > went up, it was about all I did - stare out the window at these telephone > wires and think how civilization had caught up with me and I wasn't going to > be able to escape after all.
The Golden Haired Girl was yet another ghost that was said to stare out into the sea, dressed in white, mourning the loss of her lover at sea. Pineys would often tell stories of the Jersey Devil sitting alongside her, accompanying her on her vigil. Another legend says the Jersey Devil had a son, strangely human, who fell in love with a rich girl. However, her family did not agree with this.
Davies brought his talents to the comedy world in the BBC sketch show Big Train, commentating with his distinctive enthusiasm on the fictional "World Stare-Out Championships" with Phil Cornwell. In 1995, Davies put his voice to Actua Soccer by Gremlin Interactive. He also provided commentary in sequels to the game, including the UEFA European Championship official video game of the 1996 UEFA European Championship (Euro '96). Trevor Brooking joined Davies as co-commentator in the later titles.
Another commonly accepted ruleset is the 'ambush' ruleset, where one participant begins the contest without the opponent initially being aware of it. As soon as eye contact is made, the staring contest has begun, and proceeds according to regular conventions. The contest is allowed to pass without the opponent being aware they were involved. Staring contests ('Stare- out') were featured as an animation in the first series of surreal BBC television comedy sketch show Big Train (aired in 1998).
" In a more mild but troubled manner, Cindy Barnett in Never Far from Home says that (p153) "I had struggled for years with what Dr. Freeman had taught about divine healing. It wasn't that I doubted God would heal, but I questioned the way medical science was put down and discouraged. I was always trying to build up my faith, looking at it from every angle, reading books, and asking God about it. I would stare out the window wondering where all this would lead.
The animation satirised televised sporting events coverage and its over-excited commentary, inspired by events such as the World Chess Championship, boxing and the football World Cup. The sketches are set during the World Stare-out Championship Finals, a staring match which is described as a global event broadcast all over the world. In season two, episode four of the Cartoon Network animated sitcom Regular Show, the main villain, "Peeps" (who is a large floating eyeball), is defeated by participating in a staring contest and losing.
His writing and commissioned directorial debut came in 1997 with a Channel 4 film called The Broken Jaw. This animated comedy illustrated the plight of a public house after it has been transformed into a fun pub. During the same year he animated the world stare-out championship for BBC comedy sketch show Big Train. As well as being the producer on the Channel 4/MOMI scheme, he also worked as producer with Cramp Twins creator, Brian Wood, on his Channel 4 film School Disco and "Bunny Schendler" on her BAFTA nominated "World of Interiors".
Born in Brooklyn of Catholic and Protestant descent, he said his father "did nothing, never worked, a manic depressive who used to sit by the window and just stare out. We used to live on Home Relief. My brother David and I went begging for food." He bought his first camera at the 1939 World's Fair for 39 cents, but he did not start taking photographs as a vocation until he was a paratrooper in occupied Japan following World War II. He was one of the first to photograph Bob Dylan.
Following in the tradition of Monty Python, the comedy of Big Train is based on the subversion of ordinary situations by the surreal or macabre. For example, one scene features a bad- mannered man casually stabbed to death by his embarrassed wife at a dinner party. In a recurring sketch from the first series, an animated staring contest is accompanied by commentary from BBC football commentator Barry Davies and comedy actor and impressionist Phil Cornwell. The Stare-out Championship was based on a self-published comic book by Paul Hatcher and was animated by Chris Shepherd.
The following day, Kat receives a call about a sighting of a young woman near the lighthouse on the headland. Worried that Billie could jump any minute, Kat gently tries to coax her away from the edge. Billie continues to stare out to sea, until she is startled by Kat's radio and fearing that she is about to be arrested, she moves closer to the edge of the cliff. Kat lunges towards her to pull her back, but Billie steps to the side at the last minute, causing Kat to go over the edge of the cliff instead.
The television sketches concerned the 43rd World Stare-out Championship Finals. All of the events were commentated upon by John (voiced by real life commentator Barry Davies) and David Joyce (impressionist Phil Cornwell). Each episode followed a different match, the last one being the grand final between the Italian outsider Alessandro Kampagnola and the previous champion, the Polish Sigmund "Siggy" Spatsky, with Siggy emerging as the easy victor after just 7 minutes even though some matches are referred to has having been going on for several hours. The stories told by the commentators echoed those of real sporting events, such as performance-enhancing drugs, streakers, and a tale about the trophy based on the theft of the World Cup in 1966.
The earlier group are "among the most vivid portraits to survive from Early Christian times. They stare out at us with an extraordinary stern and melancholy intensity",Honour and Fleming, Pt 2, "The Catacombs" at illustration 7.7 and represent the best surviving indications of what high quality Roman portraiture could achieve in paint. The Gennadios medallion in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, is a fine example of an Alexandrian portrait on blue glass, using a rather more complex technique and naturalistic style than most Late Roman examples, including painting onto the gold to create shading, and with the Greek inscription showing local dialect features. He had perhaps been given or commissioned the piece to celebrate victory in a musical competition.
" Tara Brady of The Irish Times wrote of Richardson's performance "the blazing Haley Lu Richardson, wrings everything from her best-written role since The Edge of Seventeen." Ben Nicholson of Sight and Sound magazine considered the auteurist tendencies of the director, Kogonada, which are demonstrated in the film; "It is perhaps unsurprising to those familiar with Kogonada’s acclaimed video-essay work, which often observes the subtle details and recurring motifs of auteurist vision, that his feature debut would be equally meticulous." Sheila O’Malley noted; "What Kogonada has done with 'Columbus' (along with cinematographer Elisha Christian) is to blend the background into the foreground and vice versa, so that you see things through the eyes of the two architecture- obsessed main characters. Watching the film is almost like feeling the muscles in your eyes shift, as you look up from reading a book to stare out at the ocean.
Never before have we seen the Indians of North America so close to the origins of their humanity ... Curtis' photographs comprehend indispensable images of every human being at every time in every place" Don Gulbrandsen, the author of Edward Sheriff Curtis: Visions of the First Americans, put it this way in his introductory essay on Curtis's life: "The faces stare out at you, images seemingly from an ancient time and from a place far, far away ... Yet as you gaze at the faces the humanity becomes apparent, lives filled with dignity but also sadness and loss, representatives of a world that has all but disappeared from our planet." In Shadow Catcher: The Life and Work of Edward S. Curtis, Laurie Lawlor revealed that "many Native Americans Curtis photographed called him Shadow Catcher. But the images he captured were far more powerful than mere shadows. The men, women, and children in The North American Indian seem as alive to us today as they did when Curtis took their pictures in the early part of the twentieth century.

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