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peeper

[ UK /pˈiːpɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an informal term referring to the eye
  2. an animal that makes short high-pitched sounds
  3. a viewer who enjoys seeing the sex acts or sex organs of others

How To Use peeper In A Sentence

  • Some game bird breeders even debeak the birds or attach "peepers" or googles to their eyes to keep them attacking each other in the packed pens. (see: caged hen egg operations.) Is your state breeding birds for Dick Cheney style hunting like Illinois?
  • UV-protective sunglasses can safeguard your peepers; repeated corneal burns have been linked to cataract formation later in life.
  • The peepers, the clucking frog, and the bullfrog are the only ones that call in chorus. The Writings of John Burroughs — Volume 05: Pepacton
  • You must have hatched from a sick stinkhorn, you nauseous avian peeper. Pet Peeve
  • For one thing, those entering the theatre with a Christian sensibility operating behind the peepers will no doubt see something different from those from a secular perspective.
  • And the body beneath, the spindly thing she carried through the world, chalk pale mostly, and speckled hands with high veins, and cropped hair that was fine and flaxy gray, and her bluesteel eyes—many a boy and girl of old saw those peepers in their dreams. Underworld
  • I mean, if you've ever heard the eerie song of the humpback whale [whale song], you know that it don't sound like no spring peeper [frog sound].
  • He saw himself, easily carrying the weight of his friend, a smug grin on his face, and those green peepers of his flashing devilishly.
  • I just want to be able to shut both my peepers without having to use industrial quantities of surgical tape.
  • Sometimes on clear, soft nights, when the moon came out all splendid and the "peepers" sang so plaintively in the Hollow, the boy's heart would fill and grow enormous in his chest with the intolerable sadness he felt. The Best Short Stories of 1917 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story
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