How To Use flatten out In A Sentence
- When he overthrows and his pitches flatten out, he falls off the mound and gives up home runs.
- If you were on the ground looking at one of these things, it would look like it would just rise up and then sort of flatten out in the back scarp of the area of landform. Images Show A Shrinking Moon
- A-flat sits on the black keys enough to allow you the flatten out the fingers and glide, but the F major transposition is impossibly clunky. Archive 2006-10-01
- In the context of the game, mine was an important knock because the pitch began to flatten out a bit. Times, Sunday Times
- If your divots are too deep with your irons or if you're taking divots with your driver, you need to flatten out your swing.
- But the deck doesn't flatten out because the horizontal beam underneath holds it in place.
- Still, the torment was worth it for the precious few minutes he had with them when they were neither awake nor asleep, when they were finally still and their breath began to flatten out in rhythmic heaviness, when their bodies fell slack and rolled in toward him, toward the black-hole depression that he occupied in the middle of the mattress. Furlough
- It lay there in a wide distempered circle and then gathered itself together to jam at my feet and to giggle and to whee, and to laugh and to fall again into a puddle and to flatten out like pancake batter on a griddle...flat, but gelatin like, to pull in and regroup and to come at me again. Burt Reynolds, the pig, and me.
- Refrain from employing any projectile which weighs less than 400 grams that is either explosive or loaded with incendiary or inflammable material, from all projectiles having for their sole object the spreading of asphyxiating or harmful gases, all expanding bullets or those which will easily flatten out inside the human body, such as jacketed bullets whose jacket does not entirely cover the core or is nickel. Military Instructors Manual
- In the context of the game, mine was an important knock because the pitch began to flatten out a bit. Times, Sunday Times