The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations (37 page)

GEORGE MEREDITH,
The Egoist
 
having the eyes narrowed
squinting
having inwardly turned eyes
cross-eyed, cockeyed, strabismic
having outwardly turned eyes
walleyed, cockeyed, strabismic
squinting
cockeyed, strabismic
having restless or moving eyes
shifting, shifty, darting, swivel-eyed
having soft and dark eyes
sloe-eyed
having moist or wet eyes
dewy-eyed, watery, aqueous, glistening
having slanted eyes
slanty-eyed, sloe-eyed
having horizontally long or somewhat oval eyes
almond-eyed
having half-closed eyes
heavy-lidded, sleepy-eyed, with drooping lids, slumberous,
slumbrous
having motionless eyes
staring, transfixed, unblinking, glazed clear, limpid
having reddened eyes
red-eyed, bloodshot, cranberry, pink-veined
having weary or strained eyes
bleary-eyed
having wrinkles around the eyes
crinkly-eyed
having fleshy folds under the eyes
pouchy, pouched, baggy, bagged
 
 
Zilla was an active, strident, full-blown, high-bosomed blonde.
SINCLAIR LEWIS,
Babbitt
 
 
To the eye, the men were less similar: Littlefield, a hedge-scholar, tall and horse-faced; Chum Frink, a trifle of a man with soft and mouse-like hair, advertising his profession as poet by a silk cord on his eyeglasses; Vergil Gunch, broad, with coarse black hair
en brosse;
Eddie Swanson, a bald and bouncing young man who showed his taste for elegance by an evening waistcoat of figured black silk with glass buttons; Orville Jones, a steady-looking, stubby, not very memorable person, with a hemp-colored toothbrush mustache.
SINCLAIR LEWIS,
Babbitt
 
 
In the flesh, Mrs. Opal Emerson Mudge fell somewhat short of a prophetic aspect. She was pony-built and plump, with the face of a haughty Pekingese, a button of a nose, and arms so short that, despite her most indignant endeavors, she could not clasp her hands in front of her as she sat on the platform waiting.
SINCLAIR LEWIS,
Babbitt
 
COLORS OF EYES
 
blue, cornflower blue, steely blue, china blue, sapphire blue,
baby blue
brown, velvet brown
gray, gooseberry, slate gray, slaty
green, greenish, emerald
light or golden brown, hazel
violet
amber
 
 
 
EYEBROWS
 
contracted (as in a frown)
knitted
thick
bushy, beetling, beetle-browed
thinned to a line with tweezers
tweezed, plucked
accented cosmetically
penciled
 
 
Dr Messinger, though quite young, was bearded, and Tony knew few young men with beards. He was also very small, very sunburned and prematurely bald; the ruddy brown of his face ended abruptly along the line of his forehead, which rose in a pale dome; he wore steel-rimmed spectacles and there was something about his blue serge suit which suggested that the wearer found it uncomfortable.
EVELYN WAUGH,
A Handful of Dust
 
 
Col. Grangerford was very tall and very slim, and had a darkish-paly complexion, not a sign of red in it anywheres; he was clean-shaved every morning, all over his thin face, and he had the thinnest kind of lips, and the thinnest kind of nostrils, and a high nose, and heavy eyebrows, and the blackest kind of eyes, sunk so deep back that they seemed like they was looking out of caverns at you, as you may say. His forehead was high, and his hair was black and straight, and hung to his shoulders. His hands was long and thin....
MARK TWAIN,
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
 
 
Good heavens! it was Dorian Gray’s own face that he was looking at! The horror, whatever it was, had not yet entirely spoiled that marvellous beauty. There was still some gold in the thinning hair and some scarlet on the sensual mouth. The sodden eyes had kept something of the loveliness of their blue, the noble curves had not yet completely passed away from chiselled nostrils and from plastic throat.
OSCAR WILDE,
The Picture of Dorian Gray
 
 
Romeo was a stout elderly gentleman, with corked eyebrows, a husky tragedy voice, and a figure like a beer-barrel.
OSCAR WILDE,
The
Picture
of Dorian Gray
Noses
 
large
prominent
having a pronounced downward bend from the bridge of the nose
hooked, hook-nosed, hawk-nosed, beak-nosed,
parrot-nosed, having an arched nose
having a slight or fine downward bend from the bridge of the nose
Roman, aquiline
having a long nose
leptorrhine, blade-like
having a nose curving out or upward
ski-jump nose
having a wide nose
wide-nosed, broad-nosed, flat-nosed
having a short and sometimes turned-up nose
snub-nosed, simous, blunt, stubby
having a broad and sometimes turned-up nose
pug-nosed
having a large and bulbous nose
cob-nosed
having a somewhat flattened nose
button-nosed
having a protuberant or swollen-looking (and sometimes red) nose
bottle-nosed
having a crooked or injured nose
broken-nosed, irregular
 
 
Had orange blossoms been invented then (those touching emblems of female purity imported by us from France, where people’s daughters are universally sold in marriage), Miss Maria, I say, would have assumed the spotless wreath, and stepped into the travelling carriage by the side of gouty, old, bald-headed, bottle-nosed Bullock Senior....
WILLIAM THACKERAY,
Vanity Fair
 
 
A withered face, with the shiny skin all drawn into wrinkles! The stretched skin under the jaw was like the skin of a plucked fowl. The cheek-bones stood up, and below them were deep hollows, almost like egg-cups. A short, scraggy white beard covered the lower part of the face. The hair was scanty, irregular, and quite white; a little white hair grew in the ears.
ARNOLD BENNETT,
The Old Wives Tale
 
 
And the men of the regiment, with their starting eyes and sweating faces, running madly, or falling, as if thrown headlong, to queer, heaped-up corpses—all were comprehended.
STEPHEN CRANE,
The Red Badge of Courage
 
 
His pallid bloated face expressed benevolent malice and, as he had advanced through his tidings of success, his small fatencircled eyes vanished out of sight and his weak wheezing voice out of hearing.
JAMES JOYCE,
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
 
 
The droning voice of the professor continued to wind itself slowly round and round the coils it spoke of, doubling, tre- bling, quadrupling its somnolent energy as the coil multi- plied its ohms of resistance.
JAMES JOYCE,
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
 
having an inflamed nose (as from habitual drunkenness)
copper nosed
turned up at the end
upturned, uptilted, retroussé
wrinkled up
crinkled
 
 
She was a slender, small-breasted girl, with an erect carriage, which she accentuated by throwing her body backward at the shoulders like a young cadet. Her gray sun-strained eyes looked back at me with polite reciprocal curiosity out of a wan, charming, discontented face.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD,
The Great Gatsby
 
 
His sister, Catherine, was a slender, worldly girl of about thirty, with a solid, sticky bob of red hair, and a complexion powdered milky white. Her eyebrows had been plucked and then drawn on again at a more rakish angle, but the efforts of nature toward the restoration of the old alignment gave a blurred air to her face.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD,
The Great Gatsby
 
 
In softness of features, body bulk, leanness of legs, apish shape of ear and upper lip, Dr. Pavil Pnin looked very like Timofey, as the latter was to look three or four decades later. In the father, however, a fringe of straw-colored hair relieved a waxlike calvity; he wore a black-rimmed pince-nez on a black ribbon like the late Dr. Chekhov; he spoke in a gentle stutter, very unlike his son’s later voice.
VLADIMIR NABOKOV,
Pnin
 
 
The good Doctor had perceptibly aged since last year but was as sturdy and square-shaped as ever with his well-padded shoulders, square chin, square nostrils, leonine glabella, and rectangular brush of grizzled hair that had something topiary about it.
VLADIMIR NABOKOV,
Pnin
Ears
 
having large and projecting ears
big-eared,jug-eared
having large and floppy ears
spaniel-eared
having an injury-deformed or battered ear
cauliflower-eared
 
small or delicately shapely ears
seashell ears
 
having ears upright and somewhat pointed
prick-eared, having satyr-like ears
 
 
Her hair was as grey as her companions‘s, her face as bloodless and shrivelled, but amber-tinted, with swarthy shadows sharpening the nose and hollowing the temples.
EDITH WHARTON,
Ethan Frome
 
 
She held the light at the same level, and it drew out with the same distinctness her slim young throat and the brown wrist no bigger than a child’s. Then, striking upward, it threw a lustrous fleck on her lips, edged her eyes with velvet shade, and laid a milky whiteness above the black curve of her brows.
EDITH WHARTON,
Ethan Frome
 
 
Heathcliff did not glance my way, and I gazed up, and contemplated his features almost as confidently as if they had been turned to stone. His forehead, that I once thought so manly, and that I now think so diabolical, was shaded with a heavy cloud; his basilisk eyes were nearly quenched by sleeplessness—and weeping, perhaps for the lashes were wet then; his lips devoid of their ferocious sneer, and sealed in an expression of unspeakable sadness.
EMILY BRONTË,
Wuthering Heights
 
 
... while the Haiti-born daughter of the French sugar planter and the woman whom Sutpen’s first father-in-law had told him was a Spaniard (the slight dowdy woman with untidy gray-streaked raven hair coarse as a horse’s tail, with parchment-colored skin and implacable pouched black eyes which alone showed no age because they showed no forgetting, whom Shreve and Quentin had likewise invented and which was likewise probably true enough)....
WILLIAM FAULKNER,
Absalom, Absalom!

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