to the eye造句(1) Bacteria is something invisible to the eye.
(2) The dog is an offence to the eye.
(3) The picture is pleasant to the eye.
(4) Pastel colours are restful to the eye.
(5) The new building was pleasing to the eye.
(6) Simple, elegant, pleasing to the eye.
(7) Sometimes the heart sees what's invisible to the eye.Alfred Tennyson
(8) Its shape did unpleasant things to the eye.
(9) Though pleasing to the eye, the building is drafty and cold.
(10) Proximity to the eye is one effective way of magnifying visual material.
(11) Clothes queue up in the wardrobe, an echo to the eye, or a jangle of Euclid.
(12) Invisible to the eye, these rays can be picked up by sensitive custom-built detectors.
(13) That dirty old house an offense to the eye.
(14) A medicinal lotion applied to the eye; eyewash.
(15) But to the eye of the ordinary, unimaginative traveler, they are invisible.
(16) Optometry very important to the Eye Hospital to ask next.
(17) The magnificent scene of the waterfall is a perfect delight to the eye.
(18) Distant walls disappear in a fog of dust as dense to the eye as the black fogs of old London.
(19) He knew nothing of her except that she was called Jenny Crawley and that she was extremely pleasing to the eye.
(20) A spontaneous way to effect magnification is to bring reading material close to the eye.
(21) Then run your hand across the surface in order to detect any bumps or depressions not visible to the eye.
(22) Those suggestions are ways to make fresh foods appealing to the eye and fun to eat.
(23) But this alone will not purify your water of waste products that are invisible to the eye.
(24) Nevertheless ecology has started with that which is obvious to the eye and is increasingly concerned with what is not.
(25) The inside of the church is friendly and pleasing to the eye.
(26) The worst day was when we were in Manchester, going to the eye doctor.
(27) Quite apart from that, we want to see beautiful people that are pleasing to the eye.
(28) The knack of outline planting is to arrange a selection of these shapes in groups that are pleasing to the eye.
(29) Since any parallax effect depends on point of view, a vector from a point on the surface to the eye is required.
(30) It is no accient, he would claim, that Mitchell's Spitfire, with its Merlin engines and distinctive wings, could help win a war while also seeming wonderful to the eye and ear.