eyelid

noun
/ˈaɪ.lɪd/

Etymology

From Middle English eyelidd, eye-led, eiȝelid, eghe-lydd, yȝe-lydd, ehlid, yhelidd, from an unrecorded Old English *ēaghlid (“eyelid”), from Proto-West Germanic *augahlid (“eyelid”), equivalent to eye + lid. Cognate with Saterland Frisian Oogenlid (“eyelid”), West Frisian eachlid (“eyelid”), Dutch ooglid (“eyelid”), German Low German Ooglidd (“eyelid”), German Augenlid (“eyelid”). Generally superseded non-native Middle English palpebre (“eyelid”), borrowed from Latin palpebra (“eyelid”) (see Modern English palpebra).

  1. inherited from *augahlid — “eyelid
  2. inherited from *ēaghlid — “eyelid
  3. inherited from eyelidd

Definitions

  1. A thin skin membrane that covers and moves over an eye.

    • By his neeſings a light doth ſhine, and his eyes are like the eye-liddes of the morning.
    • […] the frightened or insane eyes of an animal, sometimes with eyelids closed in escapeful slumber.
    • Allergan, the company that turned an obscure muscle paralyzer for eyelid spasms, Botox, into a blockbuster wrinkle smoother, hopes to perform cosmetic alchemy yet again.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for eyelid. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA