Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
A perfect day to go window-shopping and to a museum, but that's not the plan.
"We would go window-shopping and then walk home."
For many visitors, the greatest excitment was the opportunity to shop, or, in many cases, just go window-shopping.
But he cannot afford to buy a new one, so he will not even go window-shopping at Best Buy.
Mr. Daft says he likes to go window-shopping before making a final dash into stores for his purchases.
Just in case some frivolous person was tempted to go window-shopping on the Lord's Day, the curtains were tightly closed.
Go window-shopping on Fifth Avenue.
I joined the crowds in the cement warren near Cornmarket where the whole population of Oxford seemed to go window-shopping on weekend afternoons.
Inside the centre, go window-shopping for designer labels and don't miss the giant indoor aviary or art galleries featuring works by renowned Australian painters.
If I’m visiting friends in London, I might go window-shopping, but I wouldn’t call it a hobby.”
Some activities around the holiday season are free, including driving around to look at holiday decorations, going window-shopping, going skating or taking a walk in the park.
Several years ago, while visiting New York, I decided to go window-shopping along Madison Avenue while my friend was at a dentist appointment nearby.
I usually just go window-shopping with my friends and come back and say to my mum "I saw this amazing skirt" and she'll give me money .
She goes window-shopping up Oxford Street, then meets her cronies in that dreadful French Pub in Soho.'
In Takabayashi's world children fall asleep listening to the tooting of ship whistles, make origami Christmas ornaments, eat organic vegetables, feed the ducks and go window-shopping on Fifth Avenue.
And this is not the first time since the Viacom-CBS merger was announced in September that Mr. Karmazin has gone window-shopping: according to several reports, he has his eye on America Online as an acquisition candidate.
We caught a film at the Wheeler Opera House (discounted to $8/£5 on a Tuesday); lingered in the sophisticated Baldwin Gallery and at Aspen Art Museum; browsed Explore Booksellers, with its warren of wood-panelled rooms, and went window-shopping at Kemo Sabe cowboy store.
They worked perhaps two hours a day, and the rest of the time they ate chocolates, went to the motion-pictures, went window-shopping, went in gossiping twos and threes to card-parties, read magazines, thought timorously of the lovers who never appeared, and accumulated a splendid restlessness which they got rid of by nagging their husbands.