L12] Cloudesle walked a lytle besyde, And loked under the grenewood linde; He was ware of hys wife and chyldren thre, 15 Full wo in hart and mynde.
But as they loked in Barnysdale, By a derne strete, Then came there a knyght rydynge, Full sone they gan hym mete.
They wente unto the Sayles, These yemen all thre, They loked est, they loked west, They myght no man see.
They went up to the Sayles, These yemen all thre; 30 They loked est, they loked west, They myght no man se.
But as he loked in Bernysdale, By the hye waye, Than were they ware of two blacke monkes, 35 Eche on a good palferay.
And if the kyng of that kyngdom Come in that tyme There feloun thole sholde Deeth or oother juwise, Lawe wolde he yeve hym lif, If he loked on hym.
And I loked in his lappe, A lazar lay therinne Amonges patriarkes and prophetes Pleyinge togideres.
Now understond heer, al were it so that the yiftes of Fortune ne were nat brutel ne transitorie, what is ther in hem that may be thyn in any tyme, or elles that it nis foul, yif that it 5 be considered and loked perfitly?
Ful rewfully she loked up-on Troye, Biheld the toures heighe and eek the halles; 730 'Allas!
Ful pale y-waxen was hir brighte face, Hir limes lene, as she that al the day Stood whan she dorste, and loked on the place 710 Ther she was born, and ther she dwelt hadde ay.
And in the toun his maner tho forth ay So goodly was, and gat him so in grace, That ech him lovede that loked on his face.
He seyde hir, whan she was at swiche a feste She mighte on him han loked at the leste; 1160 Not I not what, al dere y-nough a risshe, As he that nedes moste a cause fisshe.
And loked on hir in a besy wyse, And she was war that he byheld hir so, 275 And seyde, 'lord!
He loked on hir al grymme, but he is enraged at As he wode wroth we[rh], seeing her.
On the sixth day, Ner drinke that thay mygħt gete, Bute loked vppon the harde stone.
Do you not know that when they loked for most rewarde or preferment, the soner did I honour and aduaunce them?
They knokked on the gate · the porter was ny, And loked out at an hol · as man that was sly.
This emperour hath graunted gentilly To come to diner, as he him bisoghte; And wel rede I, he loked bisily 1095 Up-on this child, and on his doghter thoghte.
For thogh heloked as a wood leoun, Yet sholde he faille of his conclusioun.
No wonder is thogh that she were astoned To seen so greet a gest come in that place; She never was to swiche gestes woned, For which she loked with ful pale face.
Thy houses and barnes, would be loked vpon: and all thing amended, or haruest come on.
With that he loked on me asyde, As who sayth, 'nay, that wol not be.
He buffeted the bretoner Aboute the chekes, That he loked lik a lanterne 4150 Al his lif after.
Hadde sheloked that oother half, And the leef torned, She sholde have founden fele wordes Folwynge therafter, Quod bonum est tenete; Truthe that text made.
And sithen I loked upon the see, 7300 And so forth upon the sterres; Manye selkouthes I seigh, Ben noght to seye nouthe.
But al laughynge he louted, {182} And loked upon Studie In signe that I sholde Bi-sechen hire of grace.
The money is redye, but he seyd that he must have stoor with inne hym, for he loked dayly whan the Kyng wold send for hym.
William Calthorp is inbylled, and Yelvertoun is inbylled, whiche caused Markham; because Yelverton loked to have ben chef juge, and Markham thynketh to plese hym thus.
He within a whyle loked backe and chydde his seruaunte, bycause he came haltynge so farre behynde.
And whan the husbande loked up, and sawe the potte stande there on hyght, he sayd thus: Lo!
She loked in the glasse, and was greatly displeased with hir self.
Than at the last, about a yere after, her husband cam home again, and the first night he lay with his wyfe, he loked uppon his wifes bely, and saw the ii hornes painted there.
So whan her eies were hole, she loked vp, and sawe that her householde stouffe was caryede awaye.
So whan he was on the pillorye, he loked aboute, and sawe his ii felowes busy in the holes of the bouchers aprons, where thei vsed to put theyr money.
Whan she spake of the chylde, he loked on his shulder; and whan he sawe he was not ther, he said he wist nat where he was.
As an olde man walked on a tyme in his orcherd he loked vp, and sawe a boye sytte in a tree, stealynge his apples; whom he entreated with fayre wordes to come downe, and let his apples alone.
He iested at the emperours countinance; he loked alway as one that streyned hym selfe.
Ful rewfully she loked up-on Troye, Biheld the toures heighe and eek the halles; 730 `Allas!
Mary, sir, here is a sport alone; I loked for such an end.
So receyuing the letters, he kissed them thre or four times, and openyng them, found that he loked not for, and red that whych he thought not off.
A kerchyff of plesau{n}s stood ouer his helm ay ¶ The goddesse Ceres heloked in the face.
On þe morwe when it was dai, Thei loked where þat bodi lai.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "loked" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.