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"intent look" is not a grammatically correct phrase.
It is possible that you are trying to say "intense look," meaning a concentrated or intense gaze. In written English, you can use "intense look" to describe someone's facial expression, as in: "He gave me an intense look, his eyes burning with determination." or "The actress gave an intense look to the camera, conveying a deep sense of emotion in her performance."
Exact(9)
He gave me an intent look.
He gave the mildly frumpy group in the far corner of the room an intent look.
Mr. Harrington ran backward with an intent look on his face, occasionally colliding with people and falling down.
"Dive! dive! dive!" he said, an intent look in his eyes, when I asked him what the signal meant.
What changed last week is that Iran has been put on the defensive – its protestations of purely peaceful intent look weaker than ever.
A few of them had an expression that I recognized from elementary school — the sly, intent look of children enjoying the spectacle of schoolmates being disciplined by a teacher.
Similar(48)
Her stare, just minutes before so intent, looked to be searching for something far off.
Warner gets one from Duminy, then Doolan tries his first shot with any intent, looking a bit like a schoolkid trying the charge for the first time.
England started the game with intent, looking to run off the top from lineouts, but it was scrappy and I was not convinced by the George Ford-Owen Faxisll axis.
I had somehow imagined the house to be filled with music, but other than an abundance of sweet-smelling flowers, the house was filled with silence, concentration, thinking and looking – intent looking.
"Black on Black," a sculpture by Juan Capistran consisting of a black Minimalist slab leaning against another bent one, as if with sexual intent, looks like the sort of postmodernist riff on formalist abstraction associated with artists like Peter Halley, Sherrie Levine and countless others who have toyed with Modernist semiotics.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com