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gaze
[geyz]
verb (used without object)
to look steadily and intently, as with great curiosity, interest, pleasure, or wonder.
noun
a steady or intent look.
Heraldry., at gaze, (of a deer or deerlike animal) represented as seen from the side with the head looking toward the spectator.
a stag at gaze.
gaze
/ ɡeɪz /
verb
(intr) to look long and fixedly, esp in wonder or admiration
noun
a fixed look; stare
Other Word Forms
- gazeless adjective
- gazer noun
- gazingly adverb
- outgaze verb (used with object)
- ungazing adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of gaze1
Word History and Origins
Origin of gaze1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Mr Rosenberg said when he looked he saw the man "gazing into the synagogue".
Standing in the central rotunda in 2014, beneath the cathedral-esque vaulted ceilings, it was hard to take in: I gazed down cellblock after cellblock, stretching out like spokes on a wheel.
From the patio, diners can gaze at the jagged crown of Mt.
She was usually photographed gazing adoringly up at her husband, often while gathering their children around her in a beatific — and patriarchal — tableau.
The men and women shown milling about and idly gazing — which we are now doing in the museum — become projections of us.
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