What is another word for wide-eyed?

Pronunciation: [wˈa͡ɪdˈa͡ɪd] (IPA)

The phrase "wide-eyed" can be used to describe an expression of shock, excitement or surprise. There are several synonyms that can replace this term, such as "astonished," "amazed," "bewildered," "startled," "flabbergasted," "dumbfounded," and "goggle-eyed." These words can be used to describe a person's facial expression when they are caught off-guard or when they witness something extraordinary. Additionally, "wide-eyed" can also be replaced by "open-mouthed," "eye-popping," or "jaw-dropping" when used in a descriptive context. Regardless of the synonym used, the intention is to describe a state of awe or disbelief.

What are the hypernyms for Wide-eyed?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for wide-eyed?

The antonyms for the word "wide-eyed" are "narrow-eyed," "squinting," "blinking," "closing," and "tight-lidded." Unlike being wide-eyed which indicates being alert, perceptive, and curious, these antonyms have a different connotation. Narrow-eyed or squinting refer to someone who is skeptical, suspicious or angry. Blinking or closing one's eyes implies disinterest or boredom, and tight-lidded eyes indicate someone who is calm or reserved. The use of antonyms is essential in improving one's vocabulary, communication, and writing skills. The ability to use antonyms allows a person to express themselves effectively and accurately.

Famous quotes with Wide-eyed

  • Kittens are wide-eyed, soft and sweet. With needles in their jaws and feet.
    Pam Brown
  • Last summer when we were preparing for the movie, I actually kind of wanted to stay fairly uninformed about it. As we went through the process that we do in the movie, I wanted to be a little wide-eyed.
    Thomas Haden Church
  • I sat very still, as befitted a small boy among strangers, staring wide-eyed into a world I did not know. I was six years old and my father was dying.
    Louis L'Amour
  • Mrs. Coates is the very incarnation of contradiction. The action of her life is cast along the lines of conventional routine; but the hidden and real existence of the woman is carried on miles beyond and above all the material concerns, in the pure ether of the poet's realm. She will shut herself up with the "wide-eyed muse" to round a sonnet of majestic reach, or she will merge into the gay world, the laces of a dutchess about her, precious stones at her throat and glowing roses on her breast, there to dazzle all listeners to her conversation, in which bon mot, persiflage, eloquence and philosophy are interwoven. She is a "fine lady," and yet her poetry is never tainted by "fine ladyism." She is a bluestocking, but with none of the unlovely signs of bluestockingism about her. Another woman with Mrs. Coates' voice, mobile face, and evident histrionic instinct would have dashed away from the conventional life and sought vent for the "tempest within" in the mimic world of the stage, but Mrs. Coates is mistress of a perfectly ordered home.
    Florence Earle Coates
  • Imams and muftis and kathis sat here on cushions, turbaned elders who had risen above the squalor of the flesh. The heat was tamed by wide-eyed boys with feathery fans. One of the muftis much admired one of these boys, and he stroked his buttocks with a gentle hand. The smell of the holy was wafted towards entering Bonaparte, who said with care:
    Anthony Burgess

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