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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a peek through" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a brief or quick look at something, often implying a sense of curiosity or exploration.
Example: "She took a peek through the window to see what was happening outside."
Alternatives: "a glimpse through" or "a look through".
Exact(27)
Here's a peek through his photographer's eye.
No one is allowed even a peek through the gate, he said.
Yet a peek through the demographic keyhole presents a startlingly different picture.
Bruce Miroff's wise and informative book "The Liberals' Moment" invites a peek through the telescope's opposite end.
"Nudists in Lakeland, Florida, are upset that outsiders are sneaking a peek through a hole in their fence," he intoned.
We weren't so much taking a peek through the keyhole as bashing the door down with a ram and plundering.
Similar(33)
will Ivy peek through somewhere?
Taking the reader back through her remembered childhood, Bechdel offers us not simply a furtive peek through the keyhole, but a fully-fledged cut-away of her life.
Until you build full trust with your dog only let it out for a walk everyday and maybe a little peek through the garden.
His testicles are just peeking through, arrestingly.
After so many years of toiling in obscurity, the A.F.L. had taken a heady peek through the clouds.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com