1. peek - Noun
2. peek - Verb
3. Peek - Proper noun
To look slyly, or with the eyes half closed, or through a crevice; to peep.
Source: Webster's dictionaryBusiness strategy should not be a grand and sweeping overview. It should be more like an under view, a peek beneath the covers to look in great detail at what is going on. Richard Koch
The only way for writers to meet is to share a quick peek over a common lamp-post. Cyril Connolly
eskimos maybe? believed stars were holes in the sky where people who died could peek through at you. Jodi Picoult
I know that the real Brockovich liked to dress provocatively; that's her personal style and she's welcome to it. But the Hollywood version makes her look like a miniskirted hooker, with bras that peek cheerfully above her necklines. Roger Ebert
Possibly here in the Holocene, or just before ten or twenty thousand years ago, life hit a peek of diversity. Then we appeared. We are the great meteorite. Lynn Margulis
It is a process of discovery. It's being quiet enough and undisturbed enough for a period of time so that the songs can begin to sort of peek out, and you begin to have emotional experiences in a musical way. James Taylor