With eyes or mouth open in surprise.
Sinônimos
Examples for "openmouthed"
Examples for "openmouthed"
1She swept out of the room before an openmouthed Maggie could comment.
2One day we'll behold those wonders, soaking them in with openmouthed awe.
3Tom and Astro crowded into the air lock and looked around, openmouthed.
4Two bored guards turned in sudden shock and stared at her, openmouthed.
5I watched openmouthed as Augusta stood and held out her hand.
1Nynaeve spun so fast that she blurred, her face popeyed with horror.
2I hate that Jew son of a bitch and his popeyed Louis.
3The two reporters entered and listened popeyed to the story.
4I worshipped her immediately we met, the popeyed little excrescence.
5Varrin was wedge-faced, thick-featured, and popeyed, with a broad, thick-limbed body and oversized hands and feet.
1Look at the silly things gaping like goggle-eyed perch at the window.
2I felt mean to be stared at by such gigantic goggle-eyed creatures.
3He picked it up, examined it, and stared at his friend, goggle-eyed.
4Six feet and three inches tall, he was long-legged, lantern-jawed and goggle-eyed.
5The walruses at first goggle-eyed him in wrathful amazement; but he kept on.
6The ladies were invariably goggle-eyed with excitement and would finally exclaim:
7The oath was administered, and Hacking waited goggle-eyed for the revelation.
8He found his goggle-eyed partner showing a plant to four scouts.
9In addition he had a lazy, spendthrift son and a goggle-eyed, thick-ankled daughter.
10Posters advertising those events make him look goggle-eyed, even fearsome.
11Which, indeed, is witnessed to by the whole goggle-eyed populace in the truckle bed.
12Possibly it was the space suit which made him one, especially the goggle-eyed helmet.
13The fish in his large aquarium give me goggle-eyed glances.
14Emmet Malonewas goggle-eyed as he watched the action from the Emirates in glorious 3D.
15He was a goggle-eyed gentleman of a perplexed aspect, and his demeanor became unbearable.
16There was the great, goggle-eyed monster, like a mud-coloured log.