Crossword clues for angles
angles
- They're all right in squares
- Trigonometry focus
- They're sometimes right, but never wrong
- They might be right
- They may be obtuse
- Square's foursome
- Slanted points of view
- Secret motives
- Protractor's measures
- Pool table computations
- Photographers' considerations
- Measures near vertexes
- Matters of degrees
- Journalists' quests
- Journalistic viewpoints
- Goes fishing
- Germanic people who settled in Britain in the fifth century
- Geometry measurements
- Finagler's concerns
- Corner measurements
- Con-artist's stock in trade
- Catches some rays, perhaps
- Camera positions
- Aspects of problems
- Some are right
- Perspectives
- Protractor measurements
- What intersecting lines create
- Drops a line
- Viewpoints
- Emulates Izaak Walton
- Fishes
- Corners have these
- Points of view
- Right and obtuse
- Early settlers take spades
- Fishes in corners
- In the past, Germans who overcame England's corners
- Approaches very old people
- Geometry calculations
- They're measured in degrees
- What protractors measure
- Square quartet
- Hidden agendas
- Geometry measures
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Angles \An"gles\, n. pl. [L. Angli. See Anglican.] (Ethnol.) An ancient Low German tribe, that settled in Britain, which came to be called Engla-land (Angleland or England). The Angles probably came from the district of Angeln (now within the limits of Schleswig), and the country now Lower Hanover, etc.
Wiktionary
WordNet
Wikipedia
The Angles were one of the main Germanic peoples who settled in Britain in the post-Roman period. They founded several of the kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, and their name is the root of the name England. The name comes from the district of Angeln, an area located on the Baltic shore of what is now Schleswig-Holstein.
The Angles were Germanic-speaking people that took their name from the Angeln cultural region in Germany.
Angles may also refer to:
- One of several communes in France:
- Angles, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence
- Angles, Vendée
- Anglès, Tarn
- Anglès, Girona, Spain
- Angles (Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip album), 2008
- Angles (The Strokes album), 2011
- Alan McManus, Scottish professional snooker player
Anglès can refer to:
- Anglès, Tarn, France
- Anglès, Girona, Spain
Angles is the debut album by dan le sac vs Scroobius Pip, released on 12 May 2008. It entered and peaked at #31 on the UK album chart. Most of the album was recorded in a friend of Scroobius Pip's shed in Essex and in dan le sac's back bedroom.
Angles is the fourth studio album by the American rock band the Strokes, released on March 18, 2011 by RCA Records. It is their first album since First Impressions of Earth (2006), their longest gap to date between studio albums.
Usage examples of "angles".
On the previous day the chief line of movement was nearly at right angles to that shown in the present figure, and it was more simple.
There must, therefore, have been movement in at least two planes at right angles to one another.
The movement at right angles to the above lines was due to the arched hypocotyl becoming more arched as it increased in height.
On the following day they were still more open, and the nocturnal rise was greater, but the angles were not measured.
The ellipse described on the 29th had its longer axis directed at nearly right angles to a line joining the two cotyledons.
But there was also movement in a vertical plane at right angles to the inclined glassplates.
It is also always developed with the flat lower side, which, as just stated, forms a part of the radicle, at right angles to it, and in a horizontal plane.
The direction of the longer axes of the ellipses made during the same day or on successive days generally changed completely, so as to stand at right angles to one another.
Thin slips of wood were cemented on more or less steeply inclined glassplates, at right angles to the radicles which were gliding down them.
In one case of a radicle, which was growing rather slowly, the rootcap, after encountering a rough slip of wood at right angles, was at first slightly flattened transversely: after an interval of 2 h.
When, as in the above cases, radicles encountered an obstacle at right angles to their course, the terminal growing part became curved for a length of between .
After 3 additional hours terminal portion deflected at right angles from the perpendicular.
We may therefore conclude that the initial power of an irritant on the apex of the radicle of the bean, is less than that of geotropism when acting at right angles, but greater than that of geotropism when acting obliquely on it.
With the pea, therefore, the irritation from an attached object, and from geotropism when acting at right angles to the radicle, are nearly balanced forces.
We infer that this was the case, because two leaves on plants growing out of doors, had their angles above the horizon measured in the middle of the day and at 9 to about 10 P.