(1) The employees manning these centres are trained to remain unobtrusive and encourage the visitors to potter about, handling the products on display.
(2) I used to love trotting out of a morning to potter about the wilderness in my gown and pyjamas, all unshaved and generally unkempt.
(3) He is u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510not really intou251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb nightclubs and is looking for a quiet house u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510with a nice garden, somewhere to potter about like the old boy I amu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb.
(4) Last night after I'd done some ferocious blogging and blog-surfing I began to potter home.
(5) I rush upstairs, turn on the taps and potter about a bit in my dressing gown until the harsh, loud tone of the telephone interrupts me.
(6) I have to have somewhere that I can potter about in - a sanctuary.
(7) The latter is a whizz-fast futuristic racer, the former a calm, abstract, flight-game where you potter about flying jetpacks, autogyros, and parachutes.
(8) It is this focus that makes him not just a studio potter , but a ceramicist of note.
(9) At only 10m to the seabed and rising to within a metre or two of the surface, it provides an ideal depth to potter about following a first dive on one of the deeper Channel wrecks.
(10) We tracked down a house in Malvern where one of them used to live, then went to St Kilda Cemetery to potter about among the graves.
(11) My parents, as they potter through Camberwell and snooty suburbs walking their dog, chat away with locals and the subject often comes up.
(12) I'm quite happy just to potter about by myself here
(13) What that really means is that I'm going to potter about with my templates and make lots of unnecessary changes to indulge my need to do something other than study.
(14) Guiseppe has told me that he caught you poking sadly about at what remains of the old vegetable garden, so if you wish you may potter about in it to your heart's content.
(15) He had more confidence to get about and could do a lot more - it allowed him to potter about in the house, in the garden and the greenhouse.
(16) So will Marie now close the front door of her home and put on her slippers and potter about the house, now she has mornings on her hands.
(17) I might potter into Nice for the day
(18) An afternoon's potter through the rooms and possessions of the rich
(19) And after a few pints, I've been known to potter home on it, slow and cautious and wobbly.
(20) Normally I potter about my small world, enjoying the fruits of my labours, happy as the days are long.