What is another word for all eyes?

Pronunciation: [ˈɔːl ˈa͡ɪz] (IPA)

The phrase "all eyes" is commonly used to describe when a group of people are intently focused on something. However, there are many synonyms that can be used interchangeably with this phrase. Alternative expressions can include "beady-eyed", "hawk-eyed", "eagle-eyed", or "watchful". Each of these descriptions suggests heightened attention and careful observation. Other synonyms for "all eyes" might include "keenly observant", "acutely aware", or "hyper-alert". Ultimately, the right synonym for "all eyes" may depend on the specific context and the level of intensity or urgency being conveyed. However, by considering some of these alternatives, it is possible to add nuance and variety to your descriptions and improve your writing.

Famous quotes with All eyes

  • When there were fears about the future of this nation's older cities... when a few of the cities teetered on the brink of bankruptcy, all eyes were focused on Chicago for contrast.
    Jane Byrne
  • Silence. Archie let it gather. He could always feel a heightening of interest in the room. It always happened this way when an assignment was about to be given. He knew what they were thinking- what's Archie come up with this time? Sometimes Archie resented them. The members of The Vigils did nothing but enforce the rules. Carter was muscle and Obie an errand boy. Archie alone was always under pressure, devising the assignments, working them out. As if he was some kind of machine. Press a button: out comes an assignment. What did they know about the agonies of it all? The nights he tossed and turned? The times he felt used up, empty? And yet he couldn't deny he exulted in moments like this, the guys leaning forward in anticipation, the mystery that surrounded them all, the kid Goober white-faced and frightened, the place so quiet you could almost hear your own heartbeat. And all eyes on him: Archie.
    Robert Cormier
  • Born for success he seemed, With grace to win, with heart to hold, With shining gifts that took all eyes.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Judy lived in my hotel. She was just seventeen, and what she was doing in Paris was supposedly chaperoning her younger brother, a fully fledged concert pianist of fifteen, who was studying there with one of the leading teachers. In view of their combined and startling innocence, however, this was a rather useless arrangement. Their last name was Galache, and they were the issue with which the highly unlikely union of a Quaker woman from Philadelphia and a dreadfully dashing Spaniard (now, alas, dead) had been blessed. Naturally their upbringing, up to this point, had been strict and very sheltered. … Judy was so different from me that it was really ludicrous. Whereas I was hell-bent for living, she was content, at least for the time being, to leave all that to others. Just as long as she could all about it. She really was funny about this. Folded every which way on the floor, looking like Bambi — all eyes and legs and no chin — she would listen for ages and ages with rapt attention to absolutely any drivel that you happened to be talking. It was unbelievable.
    Elaine Dundy

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