1Pedro was dull, honorable, and frank; Juan was hawk-eyed and double-faced.
2We did our last extracting from the hawk-eyed one yesterday.
3She looked the picture of fleshy prosperity, a big handsome Jewess, hawk-eyed and rapacious.
4Why then should the hawk-eyed one delay his own felicity?
5Bouchard, hawk-eyed, stern, was standing by the street door.
6This is only one out of hundreds of instances of the hawk-eyed vigilance of the governor-general.
7But their vigilance, and that of the hawk-eyed man up in the Conning Tower, never relaxed.
8The hawk-eyed Whittlesey was not then its chairman.
9With all their silence and caution, however, the poor trappers cannot always escape their hawk-eyed enemies.
10A hawk-eyed triumvirate that camps on my trail from morn till night and refuses to budge!
11Then the hawk-eyed person departed, also grumbling, for that story about the damp stuck in his throat.
12Difficult as it was to admit to herself, she feared the hawk-eyed Wise One to her bones.
13But he would have been quite unable to manage the hawk-eyed one without the expert aid of his secretary.
14He believed he had not much to worry about from the young braves, but the hawk-eyed chief was dangerous.
15The hawk-eyed counsel for the Kentuckians, however, too soon observed exultation written on every dusky countenance, to keep quiet.
16Would you mind coming with that-- "herethe hawk-eyed gentleman strolled past again, "that case of butterflies?"