adjective. having eyes with a sad expression.
adjective. having eyes with a sad expression.
With sadness, the eyes look heavy, droopy. With anger, the eyebrows straighten and the eyes tend to glare. With confusion, the skin between the two eyebrows can wrinkle briefly. There's a connection between what your emotions and body language.
rheumy. adjective. literary rheumy eyes look red and wet because of illness, sadness, or old age.
Sad or Sleepy Eyes: To correct sad eyes (where the outer corner of the eye is turned downward), canthoplasty or canthopexy techniques can be used during upper or lower eyelid surgery to gently reposition the tendons of the eyelid to a more natural, lateral and alert position.
The main reason is age-related: As you grow older, the skin surrounding your eyes gets thinner and less elastic. At the same time, the eyelid muscles weaken, and the fat becomes displaced.
adjective. sad; showing or causing sadness. tungsindig, trist, melankolsk. melancholy eyes.
Green Eyes
Green is considered by some to be the actual rarest eye color in the world, though others would say it's been dethroned by red, violet, and grey eyes.
Blurred vision: Individuals may experience a lack of sharpness in their vision, preventing them from seeing fine details clearly. Light sensitivity: Patients may experience discomfort in daylight without a pair of sunglasses. Watery and strained eyes: Some individuals report watery eyes and pain from strained eyes.
Eye floaters are quite common in people suffering from depression. Either open or closed, they see these little black or grey spots in their vision having the appearance of cobwebs or strings.
Sadness. Facial movements: Inner corners of eyebrows raised, eyelids loose, lip corners pulled down. Sadness is hard to fake, according to researchers. One of the telltale signs of sadness is the inner-brow raise, which very few people can do on demand.
Eyes soften in love, harden with anger, widen in fear, narrow in suspicion, roll in exasperation, glaze with boredom, and weep in sadness. Experimental research with microphotography examining pupil dilation, blinking, and tearing might indicate if someone is lying.
having a face characterized by or expressing sorrow.
Tears do come out of our eyes when we are emotional – either very sad or happy – or when our eyes are irritated by something, like a bit of dust that gets into our eyes or when we cut an onion. Tears are needed for our eyes to work properly. Your eye has special parts – called glands – that make tears all day.
filled with or showing gloom; sad, dejected, or melancholy. hopeless or despairing; pessimistic: a gloomy view of the future.
experiencing or marked by or expressing sorrow especially that associated with irreparable loss. adjective. filled with or evoking sadness. “stared with mournful eyes”
Combined ratings from the 28 participants showed that the eyes really do provide a strong signal of emotional state. People consistently matched the eye expressions with the corresponding basic emotion, rating “fear” as a strong match for the fear eye expression, for example.
Soulless eyes are eyes that appear not to be friendly. A person who has been through a lot of hardship tends to have such eyes. The eyes don't seem to focus on anything in particular. Soulless eyes rarely show laughter. Soulless eyes rarely show sadness.
More research is needed to understand why psychopaths avoid eye contact. It's suggested that it's due to a distinct feature of psychopathy. Namely, psychopaths experience reduced motivation or capacity to develop authentic social relationships.
Slanting eyebrows, a heavy brow, a creased forehead, deep set or squinting eyes, or a naturally intense gaze can all make someone look angrier than they are. Large eyes can make people look more worried and startled. Naturally downturned lips can cause a person look like they're frowning.
If the outer corners of your eyes are lower than the inner corners of your eyes, you have down turned eyes. Also known as “puppy dog eyes,” Katie Holmes, Julianne Moore, Diane Keaton, Shanae Grimes, Camilla Belle and Marilyn Monroe are among the many celebrities who have down-turned eyes.