0 the circular centre of the object aimed at in games such as darts, or the shot or throw that hits this:
I was amazed when I got a bullseye.
1 a hard, round sweet that tastes of mint
A classic 'bullseye' impact was noted on the windscreen indicating a head impact.
I thought it was rather a good selection—almost a bullseye.
He has, as we say, scored a bullseye.
He does not say that he might have disagreements about union matters, but he arrives abroad and decides to go for the bullseye, which is £30,000 in compensation.
The world consisted of a single-runway airbase and a nearby target range with several bullseye targets.
The pathogen produces distinctive bullseye patterned leaf spots and can also cause stem lesions and fruit rot on tomato and tuber blight on potato.
However, when deeply frightened or upset, she does cry, and she has an unexplained fear of anything resembling a bullseye.
Teams split into equal numbers of players and each team chooses one person to throw closest to the bullseye.