dark-eyed junco slateolored junco Junco hyemalis | common North American junco having grey plumage and eyes with dark brown irises |
red-eyed vireo Vireo olivaceous | of northern North America having red irises and an olive-grey body with white underparts |
goldeneye golden-eyed fly | a variety of green lacewing |
bigeye scad big-eyed scad goggle-eye Selar crumenophthalmus | of Atlantic coastal waters, commonly used for bait |
bare bone | bone stripped of flesh |
bare bones | (plural) the most basic facts or elements, he told us only the bare bones of the story |
jealousy green-eyed monster | a feeling of jealous envy (especially of a rival) |
black-eyed pea cowpea | eaten fresh as shell beans or dried |
blue-eyed African daisy Arctotis stoechadifolia Arctotis venusta | bushy perennial of South Africa with white or violet flowers, in its native region often clothes entire valley sides in a sheet of color |
oxeye daisy ox-eyed daisy marguerite moon daisy white daisy Leucanthemum vulgare Chrysanthemum leucanthemum | tall leafy-stemmed Eurasian perennial with white flowers, widely naturalized, often placed in genus Chrysanthemum |
black-eyed Susan Rudbeckia hirta Rudbeckia serotina | the state flower of Maryland, of central and southeastern United States, having daisylike flowers with dark centers and yellow to orange rays |
flower-of-an-hour flowers-of-an-hour bladder ketmia black-eyed Susan Hibiscus trionum | annual weedy herb with ephemeral yellow purple-eyed flowers, Old World tropics, naturalized as a weed in North America |
two-eyed violet heartsease Viola ocellata | violet of Pacific coast of North America having white petals tinged with yellow and deep violet |
blue-eyed grass | plant with grasslike foliage and delicate blue flowers |
cowpea cowpea plant black-eyed pea Vigna unguiculata Vigna sinensis | sprawling Old World annual cultivated especially in southern United States for food and forage and green manure |
cowpea black-eyed pea | fruit or seed of the cowpea plant |
Xyridaceae family Xyridaceae yellow-eyed grass family | plants of tropical to temperate regions, usually in wet places |
yellow-eyed grass | any of several rushlike plants, especially of the pine barrens of southern United States |
black-eyed Susan black-eyed Susan vine Thunbergia alata | tropical African climbing plant having yellow flowers with a dark purple center |
maiden blue-eyed Mary Collinsia parviflora | small widely branching western plant with tiny blue-and-white flowers, British Columbia to Ontario and south to California and Colorado |
blue-eyed Mary Collinsia verna | eastern United States plant with whorls of blue-and-white flowers |
denude bare denudate strip | lay bare, denude a forest |
publicize publicise air bare | make public, She aired her opinions on welfare |
bare | lay bare, bare your breasts, bare your feelings |
plain bare spare unembellished unornamented | lacking embellishment or ornamentation, a plain hair style, unembellished white walls, functional architecture featuring stark unornamented concrete |
wild-eyed | appearing extremely agitated, crowded the wild-eyed animals into a truck |
argus-eyed open-eyed vigilant wakeful | carefully observant or attentive, on the lookout for possible danger, a policy of open-eyed awareness, the vigilant eye of the town watch, there was a watchful dignity in the room, a watchful parent with a toddler in tow |
bare(a) scanty spare | lacking in amplitude or quantity, a bare livelihood, a scanty harvest, a spare diet |
sleepy sleepy-eyed sleepyheaded | ready to fall asleep, beginning to feel sleepy, a sleepy-eyed child with drooping eyelids, sleepyheaded students |
beady-eyed | having eyes that gleam with malice |
bare au naturel(p) naked nude | completely unclothed, bare bodies, naked from the waist up, a nude model |
bare-assed bare-ass in the altogether in the buff in the raw raw peeled naked as a jaybird stark naked | (used informally) completely unclothed |
bare-breasted braless toples | having the breasts uncovered or featuring such nudity, topless waitresses, a topless cabaret |
cross-eyed | having convergent strabismus |
boss-eyed | (British informal) cross-eyed |
askance askant asquint squint squint-eyed squinty sidelong | (used especially of glances) directed to one side with or as if with doubt or suspicion or envy, her eyes with their misted askance look- Elizabeth Bowen, sidelong glances |
clear-eyed clear-sighted perspicacious | mentally acute or penetratingly discerning, too clear-eyed not to see what problems would follow, chaos could be prevented only by clear-sighted leadership, much too perspicacious to be taken in by so spurious an argument |
s besotted blind drunk blotto crocked cockeyed fuddled loaded pie-eyed pissed pixilated plastered slopped sloshed smashed soaked soused sozzled squiffy stiff tight wet | very drunk |
eyed | having an eye or eyes or eyelike feature especially as specified, often used in combination, a peacock's eyed feathers, red-eyed |
almond-eyed | having almond-shaped eyes |
blue-eyed | having blue eyes |
keen-eyed sharp-eyed | having keen eyesight |
left-eyed | having only the left eye |
one-eyed | having or showing only one eye, one-eyed Jacks are wild, the three one-eyed Cyclopes of Greek myth |
ox-eyed | having large round eyes like those of an ox, ox-eyed Juno |
purple-eyed | (of flowers) having a purple eyelike marking |
right-eyed | having only the right eye |
saucer-eyed round-eyed | having large round wide-open eyes |
skew-eyed | having eyes that look in different directions |
deep-eyed hollow-eyed sunken-eyed | characteristic of the bony face of a cadaver |