LOOK ATto look around or over something by stretching or leaning 伸长(脖子)看;探头看
crane forward/over etc
The children craned forward to see what was happening.
孩子们探头向前看发生了什么事。
He craned his neck above the crowd to get a better view.
他伸长脖子,把头探出人群,想看得更清楚些。
Examples from the Corpus
crane• The steel support beam had to be craned in; the crew was waiting for the crane.• On the second floor of London's Dorchester Hotel, people crane like meerkats for a better view.• They had been craning over the gallery, safe out of reach, so free to stare.• Most of the young, rather shabbily dressed people in the pubshouted over it or craned their heads closer to hear.• Sandal-shod farmers stand quietly in the golden evening light or crane their necks for a look at the speakers.• Others thus jammed beside her were shouting questions to those before them, and craning to peer over their heads.
crane forward/over etc• His pulsequickened as he craned forward for a better view.• Idi craned over her, like a boybiting an apple.• A buzz of wordlessterror went up from the men around him as they craned over his shoulder to look.• He craned over the balcony again, but finally he seemed to sigh.• They had been craning over the gallery, safe out of reach, so free to stare.• I drawparallel with the door and crane forward to see into the room.• Mungo craned forward, turning the side of his face to the rain.
From Longman Business Dictionary
cranecrane /kreɪn/ noun [countableC]
a large tall machine that lifts things and moves them from one place to another, used especially on building sites and for unloadingships