gape-mouthed

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See also: gapemouthed

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From gape +‎ mouthed.

Adjective

gape-mouthed (comparative more gape-mouthed, superlative most gape-mouthed)

  1. Overwhelmed with awe or astonishment.
    • 1829, The Book of the Boudoir by Lady Morgan. Vol. 1, page 150:
      "You may be wise in your study in the morning,” (says brow-beating Johnson, to his gape-mouthed admirer Boswell,) “ and gay in company at a tavern in the evening.”
    • 2004, Paul Douglas Lockhart, Sweden in the Seventeenth Century, →ISBN:
      This argument also does Sweden, her king, and Chancellor Oxenstierna a regrettable historical injustice, for it trivializes the gape-mouthed surprise with which most European statesmen greeted the initial successes of the Swedish invaders in 1631.
    • 2013, Raymond Tallis, Why the Mind Is Not a Computer: A Pocket Lexicon of .Neuromythology, →ISBN:
      The brain, we are to understand, is sufficiently complex to supoprt higher functions because it is composed of some 10,000,000,000 neurons; and, as if this were not sufficient to leave one gape-mouthed with uncritical awe, it is pointed out that each of these components connects with numerous other components, so that the possible number of sub-units or combinations exceeds the number of atoms in the universe.
    • 2014, Crime Files 2014: Volume 2, →ISBN:
      Finally there were the fugitive images that imprinted themselves on his fizzling, fading brain as his gape-mouthed head spun in the air: a night sky flocked with gentle clouds; the saffron glow of the lamps along the riverbank; the door to the synagogue garret, flapping open in the breeze.
  2. Having a wide-open mouth.
    • 2006, Gerald Durrell, The Corfu Trilogy, →ISBN:
      So in the spring my room and that portion of the veranda set aside for the purpose always had at least half a dozen cages and boxes containing gape-mouthed baby birds or birds that I had managed to rescue from the sportsmen and which were recuperating with makeshift splints on wings or legs.
    • 2012, John Jeremiah Sullivan, Pulphead: Dispatches from the Other Side of America, →ISBN, page 153:
      And on the second OOOOOOO, you picture just a naked glowing green skull that hangs there vibrating gape-mouthed in a prison cell.
    • 2014, Robert Holdstock, Gate of Ivory, Gate of Horn, →ISBN:
      A corpse swirled past me, gape-mouthed, fish-white, dull eyed.
    • 2015, Felicity Savage, A Trickster in the Ashes: An Epic Fantasy Adventure:
      At the best of times it had been too tight, and now the gape-mouthed face resembled a blue tomato.
  3. Having a wide opening.
    • 2008, Solon Timothy Woodward, Cadillac Orpheus: A Novel, →ISBN, page 68:
      A gape-mouthed wicker trunk served as a hive.
    • 2008, Richard Morgan, Woken Furies, →ISBN:
      Now the grime-filmed upper-level windows of their facades peered sadly across at each other over gape-mouthed loading bay entrances whose shutters were all jammed somewhere uncommitted between open and closed.
    • 2014, KS Augustin, Quinten's Revenge, →ISBN:
      The alien gently manoeuvred the ship out of the gape-mouthed bay.

Adverb

gape-mouthed (comparative more gape-mouthed, superlative most gape-mouthed)

  1. In a state of awe or astonishment.
    • 2014, Brendon Burchard, The Motivation Manifesto, →ISBN:
      As much as we check in, we are checking out of our own lives and becoming voyeuristic, peering gape-mouthed into the sordid details of other people's lives in order to feel connected or entertained.
    • 2015, Tracy Weber, Karma's a Killer: A Downward Dog Mystery, →ISBN:
      I paused at the entrance and stared, gape-mouthed.
    • 2015, Julia Kent, Shopping for a Billionaire:
      He tosses two twenties on the table and with a gentle nudge turns me away from Steve, who sits there, impotent, staring gape-mouthed at the cash.