Simply no, but you could make them blind.
No, the frontal section would divide the head into front and back portions, which means the eyes would be within the front portion with the back of the head behind them.
Does a fly have eyes in the back of its head
Does it make sense when you translate it literally? If not, it's an idiom.Do people literally have eyes on the back of their heads? No, so that's the answer.
It has nothing to do with "supernatural powers of sight or insight".It simply means someone who has heightened awareness - you can see or sense things that most people would not notice. It often means something impossible to see or know about as expressed by " I would need to have eyes in the back of head " (to know about that.)When you can see things without really looking directly at them.This idiom is often about parents, especially moms, or about something important to an adult.For example: The child tried to sneak out of the house while the mother was cooking but she has eyes on the back of her head and anticipated that her child might try to leave.NOTE: This idiom can be said as "do" or "don't" / doesn't, or "would have to...".Dad has eyes in the back of his head when it comes to kids around his motorcycle. He yells at the kids before they even think to go near it.Grandma doesn't need to have eyes in the back of her head since her own children became middle aged adults.I would have to have eyes in the back of my head to keep up with the bad things my teenagers try to do.
Your eyes can roll to the back of your head when you have a seizure - it is not the epilepsy medications that do this.
Bob came up with it after a dream in wich he said hi to people with eyes in the back of their head.
Seizures.
No.
No.
If someone were to gaze directly into the eyes of a creature with a head resembling a combination of Trump and Medusa, they would likely be turned to stone, as Medusa's gaze had the power to petrify those who looked at her directly.
No nothing has eyes on the back of there head only front. Well exept for spiders.
The eyes of a koala are basically positioned in the front of its head, though they are set back a little.