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bull's eye

The very center of a shooting or archery target is a bull's eye. An archer gets ten points if her arrow hits the bull's eye.

The familiar design of ever-smaller circles within circles is a bull's eye, whether it's an actual target or just resembles one. Darts players might yell, "Bull's eye!" when they hit that center ring. The term originated with 1880s shooting competitions in England, either from the idea that the black circle in the middle of the target looks like the eye of a bull, or possibly a five shilling coin that was popularly called a bull's eye.

Definitions of bull's eye
  1. noun
    the center of a target
    synonyms: bull
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    type of:
    center, centre, midpoint
    a point equidistant from the ends of a line or the extremities of a figure
  2. noun
    in target shooting: a score made by hitting the center of the target
    “in repeated sets of five shots his numbers of bull's-eyes varied”
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    type of:
    score
    the act of scoring in a game or sport
  3. noun
    something that exactly succeeds in achieving its goal
    “scored a bull's eye
    synonyms: bell ringer, home run, mark
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    type of:
    success
    an attainment that is successful
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DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘bull's eye'. Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors. Send us feedback
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