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"lean at" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is commonly used to describe someone or something being in a tilted or inclined position, often with a support or against something. Example: She leaned at the edge of the cliff, admiring the breathtaking view below.
Exact(60)
The building's sloping tiers lean at the same angle as the tip of the Washington Monument.
They have textured trunks that lean at angles and immediately suggested a leafy woodland approach meandering between them.
Still lean at 51, Mr. Baker has seen life improve since his youth in the Jim Crow South.
The palms lean at every imaginable angle around a central pond, giving the place an atmosphere of drunken design.
"When he goes down the stairs, he starts to lean at you, so you have to support him".
Doering, lanky and lean at about 6-foot-4, was known for his booming voice, strong opinions and fondness for German wine.
In "Stygian Flight," two men with spearlike drills stand atop 100-foot ladders that lean at dizzying angles and play against the diagonal striations on the mine's surfaces.
This miracle of lathe-handling and geometric calculation has a Pisa-like lean at once slinky and wobbly that can evoke the putti.
Beginning Wednesday the company, lean at just 18 members from 44 in 2004, will perform at the Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center.
Blair and Brown were more developed politically by 1997 but both suffered from having no ministerial past on which to lean at moments of crisis.
Aside from being solid and lean at forty-three minutes long, it is one of the only readily available collections of Baltimore rap and dance music.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com