double-oblique
English
Adjective
double-oblique (not comparable)
- Combining or including two oblique angles.
- 1958, J Bowden, “The Structure and Innervation of Lamellibranch Muscle”, in International Review of Cytology, volume 7, page 319:
- In certain other molluscan muscles, however, Marceau (1908) observed double-oblique striations which could not be ascribed to the presence of spirally wound, homogeneous fibrils.
- 2007, Maximilian F Reiser, Wolfhard Semmler, Hedvig Hricak, Magnetic Resonance Tomography, page 1451:
- In double oblique angulations, the first rotation is chosen about the vertical image axis and the second about the (new) horizontal axis.
- 2019, Chin-Hsing Kuo, Pei-Chun Lin, Terence Essomba, Robotics and Mechatronics, page 165:
- Figure 1(a) shows a novel translating follower having double oblique flat-faced configuration.
- 2021, Forrest E. Ames, Clement C. Tang, An Introduction to Compressible Flow, page 139:
- These applications include the startup of a supersonic test section, single and double oblique shock diffusers, supersonic airfoils, and supersonic nozzles.
- (grammar, rare) Aligning the agent and object in nonergative tenses but aligning the subject and object in ergative tenses.
- 1998, Vit Bubenik, A Historical Syntax of Late Middle Indo-Aryan, page 224:
- Even less common is the double-oblique type, found in certain Pamir languages (Payne 1980), Kashmiri and Pashto (Bubenik 1989b).
- 2002, N.E. Collinge, An Encyclopedia of Language:
- The historical origin of the double-oblique system can be easily reconstructed: the transitive past with its characteristic double-oblique form as shown in (53) was originally ergative, with an oblique A and an absolutive O.
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