open wide
1Open Wide: Tooth School Inside —   …
2wide-eyed — wide′ eyed adj. having the eyes open wide, as in amazement, innocence, or sleeplessness • Etymology: 1850–55 …
3open — o|pen1 [ oupən ] adjective *** ▸ 1 when public can visit ▸ 2 when you can see inside ▸ 3 not covered/enclosed ▸ 4 not blocked ▸ 5 not hidden/secret ▸ 6 anyone can see/join ▸ 7 considering suggestions ▸ 8 when something can be done ▸ 9 possible ▸… …
4open */*/*/ — I UK [ˈəʊpən] / US [ˈoʊpən] adjective 1) if a shop, restaurant etc is open, people are working there and the public can use or visit it Are the shops open on Sundays? There s a bar that stays open all night. open for business: We are open for… …
5open — 1 adjective NOT CLOSED 1 DOOR/CONTAINER not closed, so that you can go through, take things out, or put things in: an open window | I guess I did leave the door open. | I can t get this milk open. | wide open (=completely open): The door was wide …
6wide-open — adjective 1. open wide (Freq. 1) left the doors wide open • Similar to: ↑open, ↑unfastened 2. lax in enforcing laws a wide open town • Syn: ↑lawless …
7wide — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} adj. 1 covering a large area or range VERBS ▪ be, seem ▪ become ADVERB ▪ extremely, fairly, very …
8open — I adj. 1) open for (open for business) 2) (cannot stand alone) open to (open to the public; I m open to suggestions) 3) (misc.) to lay oneself open to criticism; to bring smt. out into the open II v. 1) to open wide 2) (D; intr., tr.) to open by …
9wide — /waɪd / (say wuyd) adjective (wider, widest) 1. having considerable or great extent from side to side; broad; not narrow. 2. having a certain or specified extent from side to side: three metres wide. 3. of great horizontal extent; extensive;… …
10wide open — ▶ adjective 1 his eyes were wide open: FULLY OPEN, open wide, agape. 2 the championship is wide open: UNPREDICTABLE, uncertain, unsure, in the balance, up in the air; …