eyeball

UK /ˈaɪ.bɔːl/ US /ˈaɪ.bɔl/
noun 5verb 3

Definitions

noun

1

The ball of the eye.

Near-synonym: eye

You'll change your mind about not bothering with safety glasses once you've injured your eyeball. That's called closing the barn door after the horse gets out.

2

An instance of eyeballing something.

Give this report an eyeball, will you please?

3

Surveillance.

Intelligence work is necessarily limited in scope by the capacity of national surveillance systems. […] Ultimately, it is only when you have an 'eyeball' or the electronic equivalent on a suspect that you have a reasonable chance of a preventive intervention.

4

A readership or viewership.

We need compelling content for the new Web site so we can attract more eyeballs.

When The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power debuted at the same time as House of the Dragon, much noise was made about which show attracted more eyeballs.

5

A face-to-face meeting.

We had an eyeball last year.

verb

1

To gauge, estimate or judge by eye, rather than measuring precisely; to look or glance at.

A good cook can often just eyeball the correct quantities of ingredients.

Each geometric construction must be exact; eyeballing it and getting close does not count.

2

To stare at intently.

Are you eyeballing my girl?

3

To roll one's eyes.

Guardiola strode on to the pitch at half-time to remonstrate with the Spanish referee, Antonio Mateu Lahoz, but went too far with his eyeballing and matador-like hand movements. He was “upstairs”, in the Colin Bell stand, to watch Liverpool’s second-half turnaround and a dismal seven days for City take another turn for the worse.

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