0 a person who watches for danger and warns other people -- obserwator/ka, czujka
1 to be continuing to search for something or someone -- mieć oczy (szeroko) otwarte , uważać
I'm always on the lookout for interesting new recipes.
The local authorities are warned when firing is to take place and military lookouts are posted to watch for shipping.
They are constantly on the lookout for new and more attractive market opportunities, always trying to be first into a new product or service area.
The technical research community should always be on the lookout for new technologies.
The square will serve as a lookout, and the view from this spot will be framed by densely built, though not very tall, houses.
Given the gravitational pull of this emergent category, we might expect more, and if so, we should be on the lookout.
He resolved the problem by adopting the role of lookout, warning the men when strangers, particularly police, were approaching.
Ministers, moreover, were on the lookout for capable lawyers.
His movies keep me happy and always on the lookout for fellow fans.