gape
Definitions
verb
To open the mouth wide, especially involuntarily, as in a yawn, anger, or surprise.
1723, Jonathan Swift, The Journal of a Modern Lady, 1810, Samuel Johnson, The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper, Volume 11, page 467, She stretches, gapes, unglues her eyes, / And asks if it be time to rise;
Eustace gaped at him in amazement. When his urbanity dropped away from him, as now, he had an innocence of expression which was almost infantile. It was as if the world had never touched him at all.
To stare in wonder.
Home I vvould go, / But that my Dores are hatefull to my eyes. / Fill'd and damm'd up vvith gaping Creditors, / VVatchfull as Fovvlers vvhen their Game vvill ſpring; […]
The ugly and the stupid have the best of it in this world. They can sit at their ease and gape at the play.
To open wide; to display a gap.
The wound was gaping open and losing too much blood.
May that ground gape, and swallow me alive, / Where I shall kneel to him who slew my father!
To open the passage to the vomeronasal organ, analogous to the flehming in other animals.
To depict a dilated anal or vaginal cavity upon penetrative sexual activity.
noun
An act of gaping; a yawn.
Now a gen'ral gape goes round, And vapours cloud each sleepy head.
A large opening.
A disease in poultry caused by gapeworm in the windpipe, a symptom of which is frequent gaping.
The width of an opening.
The maximum opening of the mouth (of a bird, fish, etc.) when it is open.