- Black eye
- contusion
- Damage (fruit)
- Hurt peeper viewing decrepit shrine
- Injury under the skin
- To injure, as by a blow or collision, without
laceration; to contuse; as, to bruise one's finger with a hammer; to
bruise the bark of a tree with a stone; to bruise an apple by letting
it fall.
- To break; as in a mortar; to bray, as minerals, roots,
etc.; to crush.
- A black eye, informally
- Black eye
- Black eye (colloq)
- Black eye (slang)
- Black eye, informally
- Direct light right into injured eye
- Hurt peeper viewing decrepit shrine
- A scholar
- Apple of the eye
- Centre of iris
- Eye opening
- Eye part
- Opening in the eye
- Part of eye
- Of a colour between black and white
- White mixed with black, as the color of pepper and salt,
or of ashes, or of hair whitened by age; sometimes, a dark mixed color;
as, the soft gray eye of a dove.
- Gray-haired; gray-headed; of a gray color; hoary.
- Old; mature; as, gray experience. Ames.
- A gray color; any mixture of white and black; also, a neutral
or whitish tint.
- An animal or thing of gray color, as a horse, a badger, or a
kind of salmon.
- Ashen
- Chess player opening first
- Eye part
- first turn in chess
- Pale
- Snooker ball colour
- Very pale
- A small European singing bird (Saxicola /nanthe). The
male is white beneath, bluish gray above, with black wings and a black
stripe through each eye. The tail is black at the tip and in the
middle, but white at the base and on each side. Called also checkbird,
chickell, dykehopper, fallow chat, fallow finch, stonechat, and
whitetail.