Eye Definition

ī
eyed, eyeing, eyes, eying
noun
eyes
The organ of sight in humans and animals.
Webster's New World
Either of a pair of hollow structures located in bony sockets of the skull, functioning together or independently, each having a lens capable of focusing incident light on an internal photosensitive retina from which nerve impulses are sent to the brain; the vertebrate organ of vision.
American Heritage Medicine
The eyeball.
Webster's New World
The external, visible portion of this organ together with its associated structures, especially the eyelids, eyelashes, and eyebrows.
American Heritage Medicine
The iris.
Brown eyes.
Webster's New World
Synonyms:
pronoun
(UK, colloquial) The comedic magazine Private Eye.
Wiktionary
(UK) The London Eye, a tourist attraction in London.
Wiktionary
verb
eyed, eyeing, eyes, eying
To look at.
Eyed the passing crowd with indifference.
American Heritage
To appear (to the eyes)
Webster's New World
To look at; watch carefully; observe.
Webster's New World
To provide with eyes, or holes.
Webster's New World

To view something narrowly, as a document or a phrase in a document.

Wiktionary
Antonyms:
  • look away
other

(An organ that is sensitive to light, by which means animals see): ocellus.

Wiktionary
idiom
all eyes
  • Fully attentive.
American Heritage
an eye for an eye
  • Punishment in which an offender suffers what the victim has suffered.
American Heritage
clap
  • To look at.
American Heritage
eye to eye
  • In agreement:

    We're eye to eye on all the vital issues.

American Heritage
have eyes for
  • To be interested in.
American Heritage

Other Word Forms of Eye

Noun

Singular:
eye
Plural:
eyes

Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Eye

Origin of Eye

  • From Middle English, from Old English ēaġe (“eye”), from Proto-Germanic *augô (“eye”) (compare Scots ee, West Frisian each, Dutch oog, German Auge, Swedish öga), from Proto-Indo-European *h₃okʷ-, *h₃ekʷ- (“eye; to see”) (compare Latin oculus, Lithuanian akìs, Old Church Slavonic око (oko), Albanian sy, Ancient Greek ὤψ (ōps, “eye, face”), Armenian ակն (akn), Avestan [script?] (aši, “eyes”), Sanskrit अक्षि (ákṣi), Tocharian A ak). Related to ogle.

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English from Old English ēge, ēage okw- in Indo-European roots

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • Probably from a nye changing to an eye.

    From Wiktionary

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