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English
Pronunciation
Noun
eyeball (plural eyeballs)Translations
ball of the eye
- trreq Armenian
- Chinese: 睛球 (jīng qiú)
- Dutch: oogappel
- trreq Esperanto
- Finnish: silmämuna
- French: globe oculaire
- Georgian: თვალის კაკალი (t‘valis kakali)
- German: Augapfel
- trreq Greek
- trreq Hebrew
- Hungarian: szemgolyó
- Italian: bulbo oculare
- Japanese: 眼球 (がんきゅう, gankyū)
- Portuguese: globo ocular
- Russian: глазное яблоко
- Spanish: globo ocular
- trreq Turkish
Verb
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Eyes are organs
that detect light.
Different kinds of light-sensitive organs are found in a variety of
animals. The simplest
"eyes", in even unicellular organisms, do nothing but detect
whether the surroundings are light or dark, which is sufficient for the
entrainment
of circadian
rhythms and may allow the organism to seek out or avoid light,
but hardly can be called vision.
More complex eyes can distinguish shapes and
colors. The visual fields of some such
complex eyes largely overlap, to allow better depth
perception (binocular
vision), as in humans;
and others are placed so as to minimize the overlap, such as in
rabbits and chameleons.
The first proto-eyes evolved among animals 540
million years ago. Almost all animals have eyes, or descend from
animals that did. In most vertebrates and some mollusks, the eye works by
allowing light to enter it and project onto a light-sensitive panel
of cells,
known as the retina, at
the rear of the eye. The cone cells (for
color) and the rod cells (for
low-light contrasts) in the retina detect and convert light into
neural signals. The visual signals are then transmitted to the
brain via the optic nerve.
Such eyes are typically roughly spherical, filled with a transparent
gel-like substance called the vitreous
humour, with a focusing lens and
often an iris; the
relaxing or tightening of the muscles around the iris change the
size of the pupil, thereby
regulating the amount of light that enters the eye, and reducing
aberrations when there is enough light.
The eyes of cephalopods, fish, amphibians and snakes usually have fixed lens
shapes, and focusing vision is achieved by telescoping the
lens—similar to how a camera focuses.
Compound
eyes are found among the arthropods and are composed of
many simple facets which, depending on the details of anatomy, may
give either a single pixelated image or multiple images, per eye.
Each sensor has its own lens and photosensitive cell(s). Some eyes
have up to 28,000 such sensors, which are arranged hexagonally, and
which can give a full 360-degree field of vision. Compound eyes are
very sensitive to motion. Some arthropods, including many Strepsiptera,
have compound eyes of only a few facets, each with a retina capable
of creating an image, creating multiple-image vision. With each eye
viewing a different angle, a fused image from all the eyes is
produced in the brain, providing very wide-angle, high-resolution
images.
Possessing detailed hyperspectral color
vision, the Mantis
shrimp has been reported to have the world's most complex color
vision system. Trilobites, which
are now extinct, had unique compound eyes. They used clear calcite crystals to form the
lenses of their eyes. In this, they differ from most other
arthropods, which have soft eyes. The number of lenses in such an
eye varied, however: some trilobites had only one, and some had
thousands of lenses in one eye. The largest eye ever to be reported
measures 27 cm in diameter and belongs to a Colossal
squid specimen.
In contrast to compound eyes, simple eyes are
those that have a single lens. For example, jumping
spiders have a large pair of simple eyes with a narrow field of
view, supported by an array of other, smaller eyes for peripheral
vision. Some insect larvae, like caterpillars, have a
different type of simple eye (stemmata) which gives a rough
image. Some of the simplest eyes, called ocelli, can be found in animals
like some of the snails,
which cannot actually "see" in the normal sense. They do have
photosensitive
cells, but no lens and no other means of projecting an image onto
these cells. They can distinguish between light and dark, but no
more. This enables snails to keep out of direct sunlight.
Evolution of eyes
Biologists explain the origin and development of
eyes, as well as of organs in general, by use of the principles of
evolution.
The common origin (monophyly) of all animal eyes
is established by shared anatomical and genetic features of all
eyes; that is, all modern eyes, varied as they are, have their
origins in a proto-eye evolved some 540 million years ago.
The earliest "eyes", called eyespots,
were light-sensitive proteins in unicellular organisms. In
multicellular organisms, simple patches of photoreceptor cells are
physically similar to the receptor patches for taste and smell.
Eyespots and flat eye patches can only sense ambient
brightness: they can distinguish light and dark, but not the
direction of the lightsource. Thus, they are sufficient for
synchronization of circadian
rhythms and they enable a reaction such as turning toward or
away from the light source, which from under water can mean the
surface, for example. They are not sufficient for
image-forming.
When the multicellular eyepatch depressed into a
shallow "cup" shape, it achieved the ability to discriminate
directional brightness by using the angle at which the light hit
certain cells to identify the source. The pit deepened over time,
the opening diminished in size, and the number of photoreceptor
cells increased, forming an effective pinhole
camera that was capable of distinguishing dim shapes (for
example in the
nautilus).
The thin overgrowth of transparent cells over the
eye's aperture,
originally formed to prevent damage to the photoreceptive cells,
allowed the segregated contents of the eye chamber to specialize
into a transparent humour that optimized color filtering, blocked
harmful radiation, improved the eye's refractive
index, and allowed functionality outside of water. The
transparent protective cells eventually split into two layers, with
circulatory fluid in between that allowed wider viewing angles and
greater imaging resolution, and the thickness of the transparent
layer gradually increased, in most species with the transparent
crystallin
protein.
The majority of the advancements in early eyes
are believed to have taken only a few million years to develop, as
the first predator to gain true imaging would have touched off an
"arms race", or rather, a phylogenetic radiation from the species
with that first proto-eye, among the descendents of which, there
may well have been an "arms race". Prey animals and competing
predators alike would be forced to rapidly match or exceed any such
capabilities to survive. Hence multiple eye types and subtypes
developed in parallel.
Vision in various animals shows adaptation to
environmental requirements. For example, birds of
prey have much greater visual acuity than humans, and some can
see ultraviolet
light. The different forms of eyes in, for example, vertebrates and mollusks are often cited as
examples of parallel
evolution, despite their distant common ancestry.
Anatomy of the mammalian eye
Dimensions
Dimensions vary only 1–2 mm among humans. The
vertical diameter is 24 mm; the transverse being larger. At birth
it is generally 16–17 mm, enlarging to 22.5–23 mm by three years of
age. Between then and age 13 the eye attains its mature size. It
weighs 7.5 grams and its volume is roughly 6.5 milliliters.
Three layers
The structure of the mammalian eye can be divided into
three main layers or tunics whose names reflect their basic
functions: the fibrous
tunic, the vascular
tunic, and the nervous
tunic.
- The fibrous tunic, also known as the tunica fibrosa oculi, is the outer layer of the eyeball consisting of the cornea and sclera. The sclera gives the eye most of its white color. It consists of dense connective tissue filled with the protein collagen to both protect the inner components of the eye and maintain its shape.
- The vascular tunic, also known as the tunica vasculosa oculi, is the middle vascularized layer which includes the iris, ciliary body, and choroid. The choroid contains blood vessels that supply the retinal cells with necessary oxygen and remove the waste products of respiration. The choroid gives the inner eye a dark color, which prevents disruptive reflections within the eye. The iris is seen rather than the cornea when looking straight in one's eye due to the latter's transparency, the pupil (central aperture of iris) is black because there is no light reflected out of the interior eye. If an ophthalmoscope is used, one can see the fundus, as well as vessels especially those crossing the optic disk—the point where the optic nerve fibers depart from the eyeball—among others
- The nervous tunic, also known as the tunica nervosa oculi, is the inner sensory which includes the retina. Many, but not all, totally blind individuals have their circadian rhythms adjusted daily in this way.
Anterior and posterior segments
The mammalian eye can also be divided into two
main segments: the anterior
segment and the posterior
segment.
The human eye is not a plain sphere but is like
two spheres combined, a smaller, sharper curved one and a larger
lesser curved sphere. The former, the anterior segment is the front
sixth of the eye that
includes the structures in front of the vitreous
humour: the cornea,
iris,
ciliary
body, and lens.
Within the anterior segment are two fluid-filled
spaces:
- the anterior chamber between the posterior surface of the cornea (i.e. the corneal endothelium) and the iris.
- the posterior chamber between the iris and the front face of the vitreous. of the eye that includes the anterior hyaloid membrane and all of the optical structures behind it: the vitreous humor, retina, choroid, and optic nerve.
The radii of the anterior and posterior sections
are 8 mm and 12 mm, respectively. The point of junction is called
the limbus.
On the other side of the lens is the second
humour, the aqueous
humour, which is bounded on all sides: by the lens,
ciliary
body, suspensory ligaments and by the retina. It lets light
through without refraction, helps maintain the shape of the eye and
suspends the delicate lens. In some animals, the retina contains a
reflective layer (the tapetum
lucidum) which increases the amount of light each
photosensitive cell perceives, allowing the animal to see better
under low light conditions.
Some ophthalmologists
specialise in the treatment and management of posterior segment
disorders and diseases.
Extraocular anatomy
Lying over the sclera and the interior of the
eyelids is a transparent membrane called the conjunctiva. It helps
lubricate the eye by producing mucus and tears. It also contributes to
immune
surveillance and helps to prevent the entrance of microbes into the eye.
In many animals, including humans, eyelids wipe the eye and prevent
dehydration. They spread tears on the eyes, which contains
substances which help fight bacterial
infection as part of the immune
system. Some aquatic animals have a second eyelid in each eye
which refracts the light and helps them see clearly both above and
below water. Most creatures will automatically react to a threat to
its eyes (such as an object moving straight at the eye, or a bright
light) by covering the eyes, and/or by turning the eyes away from
the threat. Blinking the eyes is,
of course, also a reflex.
In many animals, including humans, eyelashes prevent fine particles
from entering the eye. Fine particles can be bacteria, but also
simple dust which can cause irritation of the eye, and lead to
tears and subsequent blurred vision.
In many species, the eyes are inset in the
portion of the skull known as the orbits or
eyesockets. This placement of the eyes helps to protect them from
injury.
In humans, the eyebrows redirect flowing
substances (such as rainwater or sweat) away from the eye.
Function of the mammalian eye
The structure of the mammalian eye owes itself
completely to the task of focusing light onto the retina. This light causes
chemical changes in the
photosensitive
cells of the retina, the products of which trigger nerve
impulses which travel to the brain.
In the human eye, light enters the pupil and is
focused on the retina by the lens. Light-sensitive nerve cells
called rods (for
brightness), cones (for
color) and non-imaging ipRGC (intrinsincally
photosensitive retinal ganglion cells) react to the light. They
interact with each other and send messages to the brain. The rods
and cones enable vision. The ipRGCs enable entrainment to the
earth's 24-hour cycle, resizing of the pupil and acute suppression
of the pineal
hormone melatonin.
Retina
The retina contains two forms of photosensitive
cells important to vision—rods and
cones—in
addition to the photosensitive ganglion cells involved in circadian
adjustment but probably not involved in vision. Though structurally
and metabolically similar, the functions of rods and cones are
quite different. Rod cells are highly sensitive to light, allowing
them to respond in dim light and dark conditions; however, they
cannot detect color differences. These are the cells that allow
humans and other animals to see by moonlight, or with very little
available light (as in a dark room). Cone cells, conversely, need
high light intensities to respond and have high visual acuity.
Different cone cells respond to different wavelengths of light, which
allows an organism to see color. The shift from cone vision to rod
vision is why the darker conditions become, the less color objects
seem to have.
The differences between rods and cones are
useful; apart from enabling sight in both dim and light conditions,
they have further advantages. The fovea, directly behind the lens,
consists of mostly densely-packed cone cells. The fovea gives
humans a highly detailed central vision, allowing reading, bird
watching, or any other task which primarily requires staring at
things. Its requirement for high intensity light does cause
problems for astronomers, as they cannot
see dim stars, or other celestial
objects, using central vision because the light from these is
not enough to stimulate cone cells. Because cone cells are all that
exist directly in the fovea, astronomers have to look at stars
through the "corner of their eyes" (averted
vision) where rods also exist, and where the light is
sufficient to stimulate cells, allowing an individual to observe
faint objects.
Rods and cones are both photosensitive, but
respond differently to different frequencies of light. They contain
different pigmented photoreceptor proteins. Rod cells contain the
protein rhodopsin and
cone cells contain different proteins for each color-range. The
process through which these proteins go is quite similar — upon
being subjected to electromagnetic
radiation of a particular wavelength and intensity, the protein
breaks down into two constituent products. Rhodopsin, of rods,
breaks down into opsin and
retinal; iodopsin of
cones breaks down into photopsin and retinal. The
breakdown results in the activation of Transducin and
this activates
cyclic GMP Phosphodiesterase, which lowers the number of open
Cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channels on the cell
membrane, which leads to hyperpolarization;
this hyperpolarization of the cell leads to decreased release of
transmitter
molecules at the synapse.
Differences between the rhodopsin and the
iodopsins is the reason why cones and rods enable organisms to see
in dark and light conditions — each of the photoreceptor proteins
requires a different light intensity to break down into the
constituent products. Further, synaptic
convergence means that several rod cells are connected to a
single bipolar
cell, which then connects to a single ganglion
cell by which information is relayed to the visual
cortex. This convergence is in direct contrast to the situation
with cones, where each cone cell is connected to a single bipolar
cell. This divergence results in the high visual acuity, or the
high ability to distinguish detail, of cone cells compared to rods.
If a ray of light were to reach just one rod cell, the cell's
response may not be enough to hyperpolarize the connected bipolar
cell. But because several "converge" onto a bipolar cell, enough
transmitter
molecules reach the synapses of the bipolar cell to
hyperpolarize it.
Furthermore, color is distinguishable due to the
different iodopsins of
cone
cells; there are three different kinds, in normal human vision,
which is why we need three different primary
colors to make a color
space.
A small percentage of the ganglion cells in the
retina contain melanopsin and, thus, are
themselves photosensitive. The light information from these cells
is not involved in vision and it reaches the brain not directly via
the optic nerve but via the retinohypothalamic
tract, the RHT. By way of this light information, the body clock's
inherent approximate 24-hour cycling is adjusted daily to nature's
light/dark cycle. Signals from these photosensitive ganglion cells
have at least two other roles in addition. They exercise control
over the size of the pupil, and they lead to acute suppression of
melatonin secretion by
the pineal
gland.
Accommodation
The purpose of the optics of the mammalian eye is
to bring a clear image of the visual world onto the retina. Because
of limited depth of
field of the mammalian eye, an object at one distance from the
eye might project a clear image, while an object either closer to
or further from the eye will not. To make images clear for objects
at different distances from the eye, its optical power needs to be
changed. This is accomplished mainly by changing the curvature of
the lens. For distant objects, the lens needs to be made flatter,
for near objects the lens needs to be made thicker and more
rounded.
Water in the eye can alter the optical properties
of the eye and blur vision. It can also wash away the tear
fluid—along with it the protective lipid layer—and can alter
corneal physiology, due to osmotic differences between tear
fluid and freshwater. Osmotic effects are made apparent when
swimming in freshwater pools, becase the osmotic gradient draws
water from the pool into the corneal tissue (the pool water is
hypotonic),
causing edema, and
subsequently leaving the swimmer with "cloudy" or "misty" vision
for a short period thereafter. The edema can be reversed by
irrigating the eye with hypertonic
saline which osmotically
draws the excess water out of the eye.
Acuity
Visual
acuity is often measured in cycles per degree
(CPD), which measures an angular
resolution, or how much an eye can differentiate one object
from another in terms of visual angles. Resolution in CPD can be
measured by bar charts of different numbers of white–black stripe
cycles. For example, if each pattern is 1.75 cm wide and is placed
at 1 m distance from the eye, it will subtend an angle of 1 degree,
so the number of white–black bar pairs on the pattern will be a
measure of the cycles per degree of that pattern. The highest such
number that the eye can resolve as stripes, or distinguish from a
gray block, is then the measurement of visual acuity of the
eye.
For a human eye with excellent acuity, the
maximum theoretical resolution would be 50 CPD (1.2 minute of arc
per line pair, or a 0.35 mm line pair, at 1 m). However, the eye
can only resolve a contrast of 5%. Taking this into account, the
eye can resolve a maximum resolution of 37 CPD, or 1.6 minute of
arc per line pair (0.47 mm line pair, at 1 m). A rat can resolve
only about 1 to 2 CPD. A horse has higher acuity through most of
the visual field of its eyes than a human has, but does not match
the high acuity of the human eye's central fovea region.
Spectral response
Human eyes respond to light with wavelength in
the range of approximately 400 to 700 nm. Other animals have other
ranges, with many such as birds including a significant ultraviolet (shorter than
400 nm) response.
Dynamic range
The retina has a static contrast
ratio of around 100:1 (about 6 1/2 stops). As soon as
the eye moves (saccades) it re-adjusts its
exposure both chemically and by adjusting the iris. Initial dark
adaptation takes place in approximately four seconds of profound,
uninterrupted darkness; full adaptation through adjustments in
retinal chemistry (the Purkinje
effect) are mostly complete in thirty minutes. Hence, a dynamic
contrast
ratio of about 1,000,000:1 (about 20 stops) is
possible. The process is nonlinear and multifaceted, so an
interruption by light nearly starts the adaptation process over
again. Full adaptation is dependent on good blood flow; thus dark
adaptation may be hampered by poor circulation, and
vasoconstrictors like alcohol or tobacco.
Eye movement
The visual system in the brain is too slow to
process information if the images are slipping across the retina at
more than a few degrees per second. Thus, for humans to be able to
see while moving, the brain must compensate for the motion of the
head by turning the eyes. Another complication for vision in
frontal-eyed animals is the development of a small area of the
retina with a very high visual acuity. This area is called the
fovea, and covers about 2 degrees of visual angle in people. To get
a clear view of the world, the brain must turn the eyes so that the
image of the object of regard falls on the fovea. Eye movements are
thus very important for visual perception, and any failure to make
them correctly can lead to serious visual disabilities.
Having two eyes is an added complication, because
the brain must point both of them accurately enough that the object
of regard falls on corresponding points of the two retinas;
otherwise, double vision would occur. The movements of different
body parts are controlled by striated muscles acting around joints.
The movements of the eye are no exception, but they have special
advantages not shared by skeletal muscles and joints, and so are
considerably different.
Extraocular muscles
Each eye has six muscles that control its
movements: the lateral
rectus, the medial
rectus, the inferior
rectus, the superior
rectus, the inferior
oblique, and the superior
oblique. When the muscles exert different tensions, a torque is
exerted on the globe that causes it to turn, in almost pure
rotation, with only about one millimeter of translation. Thus, the
eye can be considered as undergoing rotations about a single point
in the center of the eye. Once the human eye sustains damage to the
optic nerve, the impulses will not be taken to the brain. Eye
transplants can happen but the person receiving the transplant will
not be able to see. As for the optic nerve, once it is damaged it
cannot be fixed.
Rapid eye movement
Rapid eye movement, or REM for short, typically
refers to the stage during sleep during which the most vivid
dreams occur. During this stage, the eyes move rapidly. It is not
in itself a unique form of eye movement.
Saccades
Saccades are quick, simultaneous movements of
both eyes in the same direction controlled by the frontal lobe of
the brain.
Microsaccades
Even when looking intently at a single spot, the
eyes drift around. This ensures that individual photosensitive
cells are continually stimulated in different degrees. Without
changing input, these cells would otherwise stop generating output.
Microsaccades move the eye no more than a total of 0.2° in adult
humans.
Vestibulo-ocular reflex
The vestibulo-ocular reflex is a reflex eye movement that stabilizes images on the retina during head movement by producing an eye movement in the direction opposite to head movement, thus preserving the image on the center of the visual field. For example, when the head moves to the right, the eyes move to the left, and vice versa.Smooth pursuit movement
The eyes can also follow a moving object around.
This tracking is less accurate than the vestibulo-ocular reflex, as
it requires the brain to process incoming visual information and
supply feedback.
Following an object moving at constant speed is relatively easy,
though the eyes will often make saccadic jerks to keep up. The
smooth pursuit movement can move the eye at up to 100°/s in adult
humans.
It is more difficult to visually estimate speed
in low light conditions or while moving, unless there is another
point of reference for determining speed.
Optokinetic reflex
The optokinetic reflex is a combination of a
saccade and smooth pursuit movement. When, for example, looking out
of the window at a moving train, the eyes can focus on a 'moving'
train for a short moment (through smooth pursuit), until the train
moves out of the field of vision. At this point, the optokinetic
reflex kicks in, and moves the eye back to the point where it first
saw the train (through a saccade).
Vergence movement
When a creature with binocular vision looks at an
object, the eyes must rotate around a vertical axis so that the
projection of the image is in the centre of the retina in both
eyes. To look at an object closer by, the eyes rotate 'towards each
other' (convergence),
while for an object farther away they rotate 'away from each other'
(divergence).
Exaggerated convergence is called cross eyed viewing (focusing on
the nose for example) . When looking into the distance, or when
'staring into nothingness', the eyes neither converge nor
diverge.
Vergence movements are closely connected to
accommodation of the eye. Under normal conditions, changing the
focus of the eyes to look at an object at a different distance will
automatically cause vergence and accommodation.
Diseases, disorders, and age-related changes
There are many diseases, disorders, and
age-related changes that may affect the eyes and surrounding
structures.
As the eye ages certain changes occur that can be
attributed solely to the aging process. Most of these anatomic and
physiologic processes follow a gradual decline. With aging, the
quality of vision worsens due to reasons independent of aging eye
diseases. While there are many changes of significance in the
nondiseased eye, the most functionally important changes seem to be
a reduction in pupil size and the loss of accommodation or focusing
capability (presbyopia). The area of the
pupil governs the amount of light that can reach the retina. The
extent to which the pupil dilates also decreases with age. Because
of the smaller pupil size, older eyes receive much less light at
the retina. In comparison to younger people, it is as though older
persons wear medium-density sunglasses in bright light and
extremely dark glasses in dim light. Therefore, for any detailed
visually guided tasks on which performance varies with
illumination, older persons require extra lighting. Certain ocular
diseases can come from sexually transmitted diseases such as herpes
and genital warts. If contact between eye and area of infection
occurs, the STD will be transmitted to the eye.
With aging a prominent white ring develops in the
periphery of the cornea- called arcus senilis. Aging causes laxity
and downward shift of eyelid tissues and atrophy of the orbital
fat. These changes contribute to the etiology of several eyelid
disorders such as ectropion, entropion, dermatochalasis, and
ptosis.
The vitreous gel undergoes liquefaction (posterior
vitreous detachment or PVD) and its opacities—visible as
floaters—gradually
increase in number.
Various eye
care professionals, including ophthalmologists,
optometrists, and
opticians, are involved
in the treatment and management of ocular and vision disorders. A
Snellen
chart is one type of eye chart used
to measure visual
acuity. At the conclusion of an eye
examination, an eye doctor may provide the patient with an
eyeglass
prescription for corrective
lenses. Some disorders of the eyes for which corrective lenses
are prescribed include myopia (near-sightedness) which
affects one-third of the population, hyperopia (far-sightedness)
which affects one quarter of the population, and presbyopia, a loss of
focusing range due to aging.
Eye injury and safety
Accidents involving common household products
cause 125,000 eye injuries each year in the U.S. More than 40,000
people a year suffer eye injuries while playing sports. About one
third of the injuries are treated in hospital emergency departments
and more than 100 of these injuries result in one or more days of
lost work.
A delicacy in western Norwegian cuisine is the
singed head of a sheep or lamb, smalahovud, where the eyes are
also eaten.
See also
References
- Kandel ER, Schwartz JH, Jessell TM. Principles of Neural Science, 4th ed. McGraw-Hill, New York (2000). ISBN 0-8385-7701-6
External links
- DJO | Digital Journal of Ophthalmology
- Glossary of Eye Conditions
- Evolution of the Eye
- Diagram of the eye
- Webvision. The organisation of the retina and visual system.
- VisionSimulations.com | Images and vision simulators of various diseases and conditions of the eye
- Eyes and computers.
- Eyeatlas online (ophthalmological images) by Umberto Benelli, MD, PhD
- ClarkVision's estimation of the resolution of the eye
- Video: Vision and How Our Eyes Work
- Summary of eye diseases and disorders
- Your Baby's Eyes.
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health - Eye Safety
- Eye strips images of all but bare essentials before sending visual information to brain, UC Berkeley research shows
- Anything related to eyes
eyeball in Afrikaans: Oog
eyeball in Old English (ca. 450-1100):
Ēage
eyeball in Arabic: عين
eyeball in Aragonese: Güello
eyeball in Official Aramaic (700-300 BCE):
ܥܝܢܐ
eyeball in Asturian: Güeyu
eyeball in Aymara: Nayra
eyeball in Azerbaijani: Göz
eyeball in Min Nan: Ba̍k-chiu
eyeball in Bosnian: Oko
eyeball in Breton: Lagad
eyeball in Bulgarian: Око
eyeball in Catalan: Ull
eyeball in Czech: Oko
eyeball in Welsh: Llygad
eyeball in Danish: Øje
eyeball in Pennsylvania German: Aag
eyeball in German: Auge
eyeball in Estonian: Silm
eyeball in Modern Greek (1453-): Μάτι
eyeball in Spanish: Ojo
eyeball in Esperanto: Okulo
eyeball in Basque: Begi
eyeball in Persian: چشم
eyeball in French: Œil
eyeball in Western Frisian: Each
eyeball in Galician: Ollo
eyeball in Korean: 눈 (동물)
eyeball in Hindi: आंख
eyeball in Croatian: Oko
eyeball in Ido: Okulo
eyeball in Igbo: Anya
eyeball in Indonesian: Mata
eyeball in Inuktitut: ᐃᔨ/iji
eyeball in Ossetian: Цæст
eyeball in Icelandic: Auga
eyeball in Italian: Occhio
eyeball in Hebrew: עין
eyeball in Pampanga: Mata
eyeball in Georgian: თვალი
eyeball in Kurdish: Çav
eyeball in Latin: Oculus
eyeball in Luxembourgish: A (Sënnesorgan)
eyeball in Lithuanian: Akis
eyeball in Lingala: Lǐso
eyeball in Hungarian: Szem
eyeball in Macedonian: Око
eyeball in Malay (macrolanguage): Mata
eyeball in Min Dong Chinese:
Mĕ̤k-ciŭ
nah:Īxtelolohtli
eyeball in Dutch: Oog (anatomie)
eyeball in Japanese: 目
eyeball in Norwegian: Øye
eyeball in Norwegian Nynorsk: Auga
eyeball in Narom: Yi
eyeball in Pangasinan: Mata
eyeball in Pushto: سترګه
eyeball in Polish: Oko
eyeball in Portuguese: Olho
eyeball in Romanian: Ochi
eyeball in Quechua: Ñawi
eyeball in Russian: Глаз
eyeball in Northern Sami: Čalbmi
eyeball in Albanian: Syri
eyeball in Sicilian: Occhiu
eyeball in Simple English: Eye
eyeball in Slovak: Oko
eyeball in Slovenian: Oko
eyeball in Serbian: Око
eyeball in Serbo-Croatian: Oko
eyeball in Sundanese: Panon
eyeball in Finnish: Silmä
eyeball in Swedish: Öga
eyeball in Tagalog: Mata
eyeball in Tamil: கண்
eyeball in Thai: ตา
eyeball in Vietnamese: Mắt
eyeball in Turkish: Göz (organ)
eyeball in Ukrainian: Око
eyeball in Urdu: آنکھ
eyeball in Võro: Silm
eyeball in Yiddish: אויג
eyeball in Yoruba: Ojú
eyeball in Contenese: 眼
eyeball in Dimli: Çım
eyeball in Samogitian: Akis
eyeball in Chinese: 眼
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
baby blues, banjo eyes, be vigilant, be watchful,
bright eyes, clear eyes, cornea, eye, eyelid, follow, gaze at, goggle eyes,
have a looksee, hold in view, iris, keep in sight, keep in view,
keep under observation, lens, lid, look after, look at, look on,
look upon, naked eye, nictitating membrane, observe, ocular, oculus, ophthalmic, optic, optic nerve, orb, organ of vision, peeper, popeyes, pupil, reconnoiter, regard, retina, saucer eyes, sclera, scout, scrutinize, seeing, spy upon, starry orbs,
unaided eye, view, visible, visual, visual organ, watch