onlook
English
Alternative forms
- on-look
Etymology 1
From on- + look. Compare Old English onlēċ (“onlook, consideration, regard”).
Noun
onlook (plural onlooks)
- The act of looking on (something); observation.
- 1966, Baptist Historical Society, The Baptist quarterly, volume 21, page 103:
- The object of the onlook is taken to be more than physical, more than just sense-experience, therefore it is meta-physical.
- That which is looked at, regarded, or considered. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
- (rare) One's perspective or outlook.
- 2004, Richard Briggs, Words in Action:
- This onlook is certainly foundational to Christianity. […] Religious belief is the conviction (or hope) that one's onlook conforms to an authoritative onlook, a divine onlook.
Further reading
- “onlook”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
Etymology 2
From on- + look. Compare Old English onlōcian.
Verb
onlook (third-person singular simple present onlooks, present participle onlooking, simple past and past participle onlooked)
Further reading
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “onlooker”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Anagrams
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