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take a look

British pronunciation/tˈeɪk ɐ lˈʊk/
American pronunciation/tˈeɪk ɐ lˈʊk/
to take a look
[PHRASE]
1

look at with attention

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to [take] a look definition and meaning

take a (long) hard look at sth

British pronunciation/tˈeɪk ɐ lˈɒŋ hˈɑːd lˈʊk at ˌɛstˌiːˈeɪtʃ/
American pronunciation/tˈeɪk ɐ lˈɑːŋ hˈɑːɹd lˈʊk æt ˌɛstˌiːˈeɪtʃ/
to take a (long) hard look at sth
[PHRASE]
1

to think about or consider something very carefully, particularly with the intention of improving it in mind

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What is the origin of the idiom "take a hard look" and when to use it?

The idiom "take a hard look" emerged in mid-20th century America, a time when closer regulation and scrutiny of both government and business was growing, and more objective, data-driven analysis was preferred over superficial evaluations. Drawing from existing expressions like "take a good look" but intensifying the focus on rigorous examination rather than casual observation, the idea of taking a "hard look" implied thoroughly investigating issues critically and unflinchingly, getting down to fine-grained details instead of cursory glimpses, in order to confront tough problems head-on rather than shy away from difficulties uncovered. It appears when surface-level reviews have failed to drive meaningful change or address underlying issues, signaling the need for a more rigorous, critical analysis.

Examples
1I'll take a look at your project after, I'm busy with another task right now.
2let's take a look, shall we?
3You wanna go take a look at his channel, that I linked down below.
4(sighing) For more reaction content like this, I do have a playlist which you can find up above and you can take a look at that, when you're done watching this.
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