because most cows have a double skull and when the Indians had bows before guns to kill a bull cow you had to hit it is the eye and the new settlers brought gun so there was no need to hit them in the eye any longer but for target shooting they seen the skill to hit it so the called the middle and smallest target a bulls eye
As a noun: "I shot at the target and hit the bulls-eye!"As a verb: "The bully was known to target those weaker than himself."
I have great accuracy; I can hit the bulls-eye every time!
Missing the bulls-eye but hitting the same spot every timeFor an archer to be precise but not accurate, they would be hitting very close to the same spot each time, but they would not hit the center of the target.
"Aiming carefully, he flung a snowball that hit Ricky squarely in the back of the head, and then he dropped down to await the hail of return snowballs his bulls-eye would undoubtedly provoke."
It is best to think of this in terms of a shooting target, when the bullet hits close to the bulls-eye, this is accuracy. In other words it is how close your result is to what it is supposed to be. Precision is about the grouping, if you fir 5 shots and one hits the bulls-eye, then on hits far above it, one below it, one to the left, and one to the right, they are not close and therefore your precision is off. However even if you hit as far from the bulls-eye as possible, but all five bullets hit in the same area, then this is precision. In other words if all of your results of your experiment always turn out about the same, it is precise.
That depends on how hard you were hit, but typically, no.
the kid hit the bull's eye yesterday
The eye?
When aiming at the bull's eye, you typically need to aim slightly above it because of gravity. When you release the arrow, it arcs downward due to gravity, so aiming above the target compensates for the arrow's drop as it travels towards the bull's eye. This technique helps ensure that the arrow hits the intended target accurately.
The Chicago Bulls joined the NBA during the 1966-1967 Season.
Reflex to protect your eye.