ojeada
glance ; glimpse ; peek ; quick look.
After a glance at the 10 titles, the searcher decides to look closer at item 5.
The article is entitled 'A glimpse into the crystal ball: academic libraries in the year 2000'.
The article 'Fifty years of silent service: a peek inside the CIA Library' describes the library of the Central Intelligence Agency.
A quick look at different types of saddles will reveal the history of their development and use.
echar una ojeada [Expresión tomada del argot 'Cockney' de Londres que rima con 'have a look']
look through
glance at
have + a look
peek
take + a peek at
take + a look at
take + a gander at
glance over
have + a gander at
have + a butcher's (hook)
If you possess a copy of CC it would be advisable for you to look through it at this stage and acquaint yourself with the general appearance of each Part before proceeding further.
He glanced casually at the ill-balanced frontages of the buildings ahead that stretched on and on until they melded in an indistinguishable mass of gray at Laurence Street.
I thought you might like to have a look at American Libraries' report on the IFLA conference in Glasgow.
The article 'Peeking inside the black box - a look at the private life of your modem' explains the theory and mechanism of modems.
Take a peek at the world through the eyes of its youngest inhabitants via PapaInk, an online archive of children's artworks.
It seems appropriate to take a retrospective look at the evolution of our catalog and the ideology which has shaped it.
I had a mechanic chap take a gander earlier on and he said it's possible the pedal itself is kaput, as in there's something fishy going on with the mechanics of it.
He sat there in the coffee shop, every so often glancing over his paper.
Not seen it but will have a gander early in the week.
The exhibition will be on for another week - closes on the 18th, so plenty of time to come have a butcher's hook.
echar una ojeada a
cast + a glance over
In common with many other organisations in South Africa, the Library and Information Association of South Africa (LIASA) is casting an evaluative glance over the last ten years since the advent of the democratic dispensation in 1994.