cat's eye
Americannoun
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any of certain gems having a chatoyant luster, especially chrysoberyl.
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a playing marble marked with eyelike concentric circles.
noun
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any of a group of gemstones, esp a greenish-yellow variety of chrysoberyl, that reflect a streak of light when cut in a rounded unfaceted shape
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Also called: ataata. a grazing marine gastropod, Turbo smaragdus , of New Zealand waters
Other Word Forms
Noun Inflected Forms
Etymology
Origin of cat's eye
First recorded in 1545–55
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
See Examples For:
Light enters the eye through the cornea, the round, transparent surface of the cat’s eye.
From National Geographic ● Jan. 2, 2024
The bright, sweetish, clear liqueur is the color of a cat’s eye, and it hits the tongue like a fairy spell, otherworldly and arcane, floral, grassy and herbaceously vibrant.
From Seattle Times ● Apr. 6, 2022
As a strange sound comes in over the telephone line and radio, Faye expresses her concern with a furrowed brow and quizzical looks behind her cat's eye glasses.
From Salon ● Dec. 16, 2020
In Baldwin’s book, the story is positioned at cat’s eye level, a little like the perspective in a Tom and Jerry cartoon.
From The Guardian ● Jun. 25, 2019
I retrieve my blue cat’s eye from where it’s been lying all winter in the corner of my bureau drawer.
From "Cat's Eye" by Margaret Atwood
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Like the fox in the logo, Ms. Lahat has coppery hair and wears cat’s-eye glasses.
From New York Times ● Aug. 20, 2019
“We always say there’s a lot of movies in this movie,” offers Gordon, who has blunt Betty Page bangs and eyeliner that flicks up at the corners in a delicate cat’s-eye.
From Washington Post ● Jun. 21, 2017
A woman in cat’s-eye glasses and straight dark hair sat on another woman’s lap; the woman with glasses turned out to be one-half of a married heterosexual couple from Westchester.
From New York Times ● May 11, 2017
Hyman, who was on leave to finish writing her book on Renaissance erotic poetry, wore bright-red cat’s-eye glasses and matching lipstick.
From The New Yorker ● May 23, 2016
‘I’d go for contacts - glowing orange ones with cat’s-eye pupils. Those would be cool.’
From "Blood of Olympus" by Rick Riordan
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Never before has there been such a phantasmagoria of shapes, sizes, colors and prices: python, polka-dotted and zebra frames, champagne, vermilion and espresso-colored lenses, asymmetric cat's-eyes and jewelry-bedizened sun helmets that cost thousands of dollars.
From Time Magazine Archive
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We had them all: cat’s-eyes, aggies, dearies, milkies, steelies, glassies, onionskins.
From Full of Beans by Jennifer L. Holm
There was a gnawing just under my new gold belt-buckle with the cat's-eyes on it, as if the cats had claws as well as eyes, and I remembered that it was ages since lunch.
From My Friend the Chauffeur by Lowenheim, Frederic
The groom at a recent wedding gave cat's-eyes set round with diamonds to his ushers for scarf pins, the cat's-eye being considered a very lucky stone.
From Manners and Social Usages by Sherwood, Mrs. John M. E. W.
Last summer, on the Northern Pacific, the man offered your cat's-eyes to me as native gems found exclusively in Dakota.
From The Jimmyjohn Boss and Other Stories by Wister, Owen
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.