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Indirect — devious
Answer for the clue "Indirect — devious ", 7 letters:
oblique
Alternative clues for the word oblique
Word definitions for oblique in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Oblique \Ob*lique"\, a. [F., fr. L. obliquus; ob (see Ob- ) + liquis oblique; cf. licinus bent upward, Gr. le`chrios slanting.] [Written also oblike .] Not erect or perpendicular; neither parallel to, nor at right angles from, the base; slanting; inclined. ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. any grammatical case other than the nominative [syn: oblique case ] [ant: nominative ] a diagonally arranged abdominal muscle on either side of the torso [syn: external oblique muscle , musculus obliquus externus abdominis , abdominal external oblique ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES an oblique reference (= not direct ) ▪ He added, in an oblique reference to the US, that ‘some countries could do more’. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN angle ▪ After a few embarrassed minutes the mourners slowly ...
Usage examples of oblique.
Shebbeare, a public writer, who, in a series of printed letters to the people of England, had animadverted on the conduct of the ministry in the most acrimonious terms, stigmatized some great names with all the virulence of censure, and even assaulted the throne itself with oblique insinuation and ironical satire.
When therefore a new tip is reformed on an oblique stump, it probably is developed sooner on one side than on the other: and this in some manner excites the adjoining part to bend to one side.
Chinese red, no trace of that ugly sectoring that gives amberoid mock-ups away in oblique light.
Because Nabokov does not require the steady accompaniment of a fictional setting, because the details appear in a flash without antecedent or context or function except their own vividness, each description seems a miracle of creativity and stands out as if caught by the oblique morning sun.
Often these silent grievers find some oblique way to work out their feelings.
Conceivably, some enchantment in the chant of crystal, some oblique spell zinging off the obliques, something occult in the dark occlusions had laid hands upon his eldritch senses and dulled them, lulled them, culled them, gulled them.
Shards of ice shear off in dense clusters with infinite slowness, hanging impossibly in mid-air, crumbling in layers until, with an abrupt and complete swiftness, they explode silently into vast spurts of hyalescent spray high in the sky that turn to rainbow arcs as they catch the last oblique rays of watery light.
But this -perverse, oblique, its potential elusive but limitless - it resembled Lunaria herself.
The edges were obtuse, the caps fleshy, then corky, smooth, the upper ends not regular, oblique in the form of an umbo or little knob, the pellicles or outside layers thin and easily separated.
Especially on bright mornings, when a few rays of sun found their way through the foliage in the yard and the ogival windows, the oblique beams, falling on the moving figures of athletes performing on the trapeze or rings, produced strange, romantic effects.
Margland, extremely piqued, vented her spleen in oblique sarcasms, and sought to heal her offended pride by appeals for justice to her sagacity and foresight in the whole business.
The hovel on Ferry stood, or, rather, leaned at a bibulous angle on a narrow street cut across at an oblique angle by another narrow street, all the old wooden homes like an upset cookie jar of broken gingerbread houses lurching this way and that way, and the shutters hanging off their hinges and windows stuffed with old newspapers, and the snagged picket fence and raised voices in unknown tongues and howling of dogs who, since puppyhood, had known of the world only the circumference of their chain.
Not only are thick-walled sclerenchymatous cells developed to give rigidity to the periphery of the stem and the midrib of the leaf, but in many cases a special water-conducting tissue, consisting of elongated cells, the end walls of which are thin and oblique, forms a definite central strand in the stem.
But nearly all these authors treat chiefly of parallel perspective, which they do with clearness and simplicity, and also mathematically, as shown in the short treatise in Latin by Christian Wolff, but they scarcely touch upon the more difficult problems of angular and oblique perspective.
This far-away vanishing point is one of the inconveniences of oblique or angular perspective, and therefore it will be a considerable gain to the draughtsman if we can dispense with it.