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Obliquing

 - 4 dictionary results

o⋅blique

[uh-bleek, oh-bleek; Mil. uh-blahyk, oh-blahyk] adjective, adverb, verb, o⋅bliqued, o⋅bliqu⋅ing, noun
–adjective
1. neither perpendicular nor parallel to a given line or surface; slanting; sloping.
2. (of a solid) not having the axis perpendicular to the plane of the base.
3. diverging from a given straight line or course.
4. not straight or direct, as a course.
5. indirectly stated or expressed; not straightforward: oblique remarks about the candidate's honesty.
6. indirectly aimed at or reached, as ends or results; deviously achieved.
7. morally, ethically, or mentally wrong; underhand; perverse.
8. Typography. (of a letter) slanting toward the right, as a form of sans-serif, gothic, or square-serif type.
9. Rhetoric. indirect (applied to discourse in which the original words of a speaker or writer are assimilated to the language of the reporter).
10. Anatomy. pertaining to muscles running obliquely in the body as opposed to those running transversely or longitudinally.
11. Botany. having unequal sides, as a leaf.
12. Grammar. noting or pertaining to any case of noun inflection except nominative and vocative: Latin genitive, dative, accusative, and ablative cases are said to be oblique.
13. Drafting. designating a method of projection (oblique projection) in which a three-dimensional object is represented by a drawing (oblique drawing) in which the face, usually parallel to the picture plane, is represented in accurate or exact proportion, and all other faces are shown at any convenient angle other than 90°. Compare axonometric, cabinet (def. 19), isometric (def. 5).
–adverb
14. Military. at an angle of 45°.
–verb (used without object)
15. Military. to change direction obliquely.
–noun
16. something that is oblique.
17. Grammar. an oblique case.
18. Anatomy. any of several oblique muscles, esp. in the walls of the abdomen.

Origin:
1400–50; late ME oblike < L oblīquus slanting; see ob- (second element obscure)


o⋅blique⋅ness, noun


5, 6. indirect, veiled, masked, covert.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Word Origin & History

oblique 
1432, from M.Fr. oblique, from L. obliquus "slanting, sidelong, indirect," from ob "against" + root of licinus "bent upward," from PIE base *lei- "to bend, be movable" (see limb (1)). As a type of muscles, in ref. to the axis of the body, 1615 (adj.), 1800 (n.).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: 2oblique
Function: noun
: any of several oblique muscles: as a : either of two flat muscles on each side that form the middle andouter layers of the lateral walls of the abdomen, that have aponeuroses extending medially to ensheathe the rectus muscles and fusing in the midventral line in the linea alba, and that act to compressthe abdominal contents and to assist in expelling the contents of various visceral organs (as in urination, defecation, parturition, and expiration): (1) : one that forms the outer layer of thelateral abdominal wall called also external oblique, obliquus externus, obliquus externus abdominis (2) : one situated under the external oblique in the lateral and ventralpart of the abdominal wall called also internal oblique, obliquus internus, obliquus internus abdominis b (1) : a long thin muscle that arises just above themargin of the optic foramen, is inserted on the upper part of the eyeball, and moves the eye downward and laterally called also superior oblique, obliquus superior oculi (2) : ashort muscle that arises from the orbital surface of the maxilla, is inserted slightly in front of and below the superior oblique, and moves the eye upward and laterally called also inferioroblique, obliquus inferior oculi c (1) : a muscle that arises from the superior surface of the transverse process of the atlas, passes medially upward to insert into theoccipital bone, and functions to extend the head and bend it to the side called also obliquus capitis superior, obliquus superior (2) : a muscle that arises from the apex of thespinous process of the axis, inserts into the transverse process of the atlas, and rotates the atlas turning the face in the same direction called also obliquus capitis inferior, obliquusinferior
Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Medical Dictionary

oblique o·blique (ō-blēk', ə-blēk')
adj.
Situated in a slanting position; not transverse or longitudinal.


o·blique'ness n.

The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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