Our eyes,since birth,always had the exact size.Eyes don't grow
An infant's eyes are between 65 and 75 percent of their adult size.
At birth, an infants eyes are about two-thirds the size of adult eyes. From the second year of life until puberty, eye growth progressively slows. After puberty, eye growth is negligible. "Yes, human eyes grow dramatically in size from bith until about 15 to 16 years of age. The size of the human eye from front to back is about 17 millimeters(mm) at birth, and human eyes grow to about 21 mm by two years of age, and about 23 to 24 mm by the time you reach your teenage years, in which it has grown to about 7/8th of an inch. This eye growth is in the "axial length" of the eye (front to back), and not in the part in which one sees through when looking at something. So, to answer the question, do human eyes grow?. Yes, human eyes grow until you are about 16 years old."
No, horse's eyes do not grow. Horses are born with eyes the same size as they will be all through their life into adulthood.
eyes never grow
NO! where did you get that?!?!?!?!?!
NO! where did you get that?!?!?!?!?!
Piranhas' eyes normally grow back, but I'm not sure about pirnahas.
Most babies are born with black or dark eyes. As they grow older, their eye colour fades or lightens. A person born with black eyes will probably have brown eyes at the age of 30. And again, a person with a dark indigo eye colour looking so much like black at birth, at the age of 30, they will have medium blue eyes.
no
every body part grows but the eyes show the smallest amount of growth
They tend to grow in age.
AnswerNo, your eyeballs stay the same size throughout your life. At birth, the head and structures within it, such as the eyes and brain, are more developed in proportion to the rest of the body. The head and eyes increase in width by only 1.5 times up to the age of 5 years, and after that only a very small proportion more until early adulthood. So the eyes do grow slightly, probably only a matter of millimetres, and only up to age 5 or so.While Richard Adair agrees with you, this information is incorrect.It is widely known that the eyes continue to grow until the early to mid teens.