0 present participle of gaze --
1 to look at something or someone for a long time, especially in surprise or admiration, or because you are thinking about something else: --
Occasionally, speakers do produce a gazing pose that seems designed specifically to show other-than-addressed recipients that they are not being addressed, while nonetheless gazing at the intended recipient.
A vain man could not indulge in narcissistic gazing even if he wanted to.
She was gazing at him open-mouthed, with undried tears on her nose and cheek and a despairing look on her face.
However, when the old speaker used a new term (inexplicably breaking a conceptual pact), addressees experienced interference, delaying gazing at the target object.
His constant gazing at a big wristwatch puts him in a different cultural frame with an alien concept of time.
The visibility of the gazing eye is also its vulnerability.
If you spend too much time gazing at the horizon, you do not see what is directly under your feet.
The opera, too, ends with the people gazing upwards at a change in the weather, as the storm clears and the sun breaks through.