angulate

[ US /ˈæŋɡjuˌɫeɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. make or become angular
ADJECTIVE
  1. having angles or an angular shape

How To Use angulate In A Sentence

  • triangulate the angle
  • If a child was doing it, it could encircle and strangulate part of the body and that would interfere with the blood supply.
  • She was about to seat herself when she heard a kind of strangulated hail. Scales of Justice
  • Dogs bred to have exaggerated angulation in the hindquarters, extreme pelvic slope, or are poorly muscled, poorly angulated, and narrow in the hips seem more predisposed.
  • Strangulated squeaks, beeps and atonal, dying samba rhythms scuttered into life. Simon Boccanegra; 63rd Aldeburgh festival
  • Imagine an open displaced angulated comminuted clavicle fracture.
  • Her voice is as sexy as ever, yet, for such a small venue as the Blue Heron Arts Center, often too loud, and sometimes curiously strangulated.
  • The British also had developed a device called a ceilometer, which triangulated ultraviolet rays to calculate how low clouds were over the three Berlin airports. Daring Young Men
  • It's a language that offers a safety valve against a discourse that oscillates uneasily between a strangulated avoidance of reality and an ugly violence.
  • Though he can do all the pro forma stuff in bigger settings, his performances can be stiff and strangulated.
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