Idiom
Bird's eye view.
If you have a bird's eye view of something, you can see it perfectly clearly.
Dictionary
bird's-eye views
noun
Plural of bird's-eye view
Exact(50)
Stirling's thumbnail drawings, his doodles and overlays, his worm's-eye and bird's-eye views from queer angles, are works of art in themselves.
When built, it should provide bird's-eye views into the Baccarat across the street.
Interior pictures are juxtaposed with bird's-eye views of the city, all detailed, but none chaotic.
Two horizontal paintings can suggest bird's-eye views of a vast, disintegrating Cézanne landscape.
Many of the trails provide bird's-eye views of the city.
"The bird's-eye views are attractive but inauthentic," Mr. Tonetti said.
Similar(9)
There, the camera takes bird's eye views of his work for posterity and his database.
His best-known collections of cartoons are: Manners and Customs of Ye Englyshe (1849) and Bird's Eye Views of Society (1864).
The glass dome of the Victoria Square shopping center provides unexpected bird's eye views of city landmarks like the 1860s Albert Memorial Clock — the clock leans, inspiring a local joke about it having both the time and the inclination.
Fly north Take off on a flying visit over Scotland's wonderful west, with bird's eye views of the Trossachs National Park, the Isle of Bute and Inverary on a spirit-lifting 40-minute flight-seeing tour with Loch Lomond Seaplanes.
Bird's eye views were most commonly used in the 19th century to promote cities, but during the war were put to another end entirely: making sense of the war for a population with only limited cartographic literacy.
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