on the lookout



on the lookout (for someone or something)

watchful for someone or something. Be on the lookout for signs of a storm. I'm on the lookout for John, who is due here any minute.
See also: lookout, on

on the lookout

Also, on the watch. Vigilant, alert, as in Be on the lookout for the twins-they're somewhere on this playground, or He was on the watch for her arrival. Both phrases were originally used with upon. Upon the lookout was originally nautical usage, meaning "on duty being watchful" (as for another ship, rocks, or land); it appeared in the mid-1700s, and on replaced upon about a century later. Upon the watch was first recorded in Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1719), and on the watch in Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility (1797).
See also: lookout, on

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
PatrÍCiapə-TREE-syə (Portuguese)Slovak, Portuguese
BeverleyBEV-ər-leeEnglish
Hasna-Arabic
Ananda-Tamil
RoslynRAHZ-linEnglish
Kallistos-Ancient Greek