agoggle
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]agoggle (comparative more agoggle, superlative most agoggle)
- Goggling: (of a person or face) staring with wide eyes; (of eyes) opened wide to stare.
- 1859, J. Stanyan Bigg, “Urban, the Monk”, in Lays of the Sanctuary and Other Poems[1], London: E. Good, page 277:
- his starting eyes / Both wide agoggle, twice their size.
- 1969, Patricia Highsmith, chapter 25, in The Tremor of Forgery[2], Penguin, published 1987, page 234:
- [He] was agoggle with surprise.
- 1977, Nigel Williams, My Life Closed Twice[3], London: Faber and Faber, published 1986, Part 3, Chapter 20, p. 169:
- I turned, to discover Louise’s face, pressed against the glass, a-goggle with worry and concern.
- 2008, N. S. Köenings, “Sisters for Shama”, in Theft[4], New York: Back Bay Books / Little, Brown, page 193:
- The boys, still young, not yet enamored of kung fu, would sprawl below the soft brown sofa, legs and hands entangled, eyes agoggle at the screen.
- Amazed (at something).
- a. 1839, William Eaton, “An Essay” cited in James Nack, Earl Rupert, and Other Tales and Poems, New York: George Adlard, 1839, p. 128,[5]
- such poetry as this / Must set you all a-goggle!
- 2008, Michael Norman, chapter 21, in Haunted Homeland,[7], New York: Tom Doherty Associates, page 390:
- […] a mysterious intruder leaving diminutive size-six footprints had residents agoggle.
- a. 1839, William Eaton, “An Essay” cited in James Nack, Earl Rupert, and Other Tales and Poems, New York: George Adlard, 1839, p. 128,[5]