1 I didn't know which way to look.
2 I should look all right with my hat on.
3 Eliza looks at him darkly; then leaves the room.
4 It's all right: he's a gentleman: look at his boots.
5 Eliza again looks at him, speechless, and does not stir.
6 Henry, dearest, you don't look at all nice in that attitude.
7 Mrs. Higgins looks at him, but controls herself and says nothing.
8 It is a room on the first floor, looking on the street, and was meant for the drawing-room.
9 Now they finds out that I'm not a healthy man and can't live unless they looks after me twice a day.
10 I've taught scores of American millionairesses how to speak English: the best looking women in the world.
11 Happier men than me will call for my dust, and touch me for their tip; and I'll look on helpless, and envy them.
12 The look is quite lost on him: he eats his apple with a dreamy expression of happiness, as it is quite a good one.
13 You go to bed and have a good nice rest; and then get up and look at yourself in the glass; and you won't feel so cheap.
14 With a look of dignified reproach at Higgins, he comes slowly and silently to his daughter, who, with her back to the window, is unconscious of his approach.
15 Her drawing-room, in a flat on Chelsea embankment, has three windows looking on the river; and the ceiling is not so lofty as it would be in an older house of the same pretension.
16 Eliza smiles for the first time; expresses her feelings by a wild pantomime in which an imitation of Higgins's exit is confused with her own triumph; and finally goes down on her knees on the hearthrug to look for the ring.
17 It lasted a long time because Freddy did not know how to spend money, never having had any to spend, and Eliza, socially trained by a pair of old bachelors, wore her clothes as long as they held together and looked pretty, without the least regard to their being many months out of fashion.
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