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Oblique   /əblˈik/   Listen
adjective
Oblique  adj.  (Written also oblike)  
1.
Not erect or perpendicular; neither parallel to, nor at right angles from, the base; slanting; inclined. "It has a direction oblique to that of the former motion."
2.
Not straightforward; indirect; obscure; hence, Disingenuous; underhand; perverse; sinister. "The love we bear our friends... Hath in it certain oblique ends." "This mode of oblique research, when a more direct one is denied, we find to be the only one in our power." "Then would be closed the restless, oblique eye. That looks for evil, like a treacherous spy."
3.
Not direct in descent; not following the line of father and son; collateral. "His natural affection in a direct line was strong, in an oblique but weak."
Oblique angle, Oblique ascension, etc. See under Angle, Ascension, etc.
Oblique arch (Arch.), an arch whose jambs are not at right angles with the face, and whose intrados is in consequence askew.
Oblique bridge, a skew bridge. See under Bridge, n.
Oblique case (Gram.), any case except the nominative. See Case, n.
Oblique circle (Projection), a circle whose plane is oblique to the axis of the primitive plane.
Oblique fire (Mil.), a fire the direction of which is not perpendicular to the line fired at.
Oblique flank (Fort.), that part of the curtain whence the fire of the opposite bastion may be discovered.
Oblique leaf. (Bot.)
(a)
A leaf twisted or inclined from the normal position.
(b)
A leaf having one half different from the other.
Oblique line (Geom.), a line that, meeting or tending to meet another, makes oblique angles with it.
Oblique motion (Mus.), a kind of motion or progression in which one part ascends or descends, while the other prolongs or repeats the same tone, as in the accompanying example.
Oblique muscle (Anat.), a muscle acting in a direction oblique to the mesial plane of the body, or to the associated muscles; applied especially to two muscles of the eyeball.
Oblique narration. See Oblique speech.
Oblique planes (Dialing), planes which decline from the zenith, or incline toward the horizon.
Oblique sailing (Naut.), the movement of a ship when she sails upon some rhumb between the four cardinal points, making an oblique angle with the meridian.
Oblique speech (Rhet.), speech which is quoted indirectly, or in a different person from that employed by the original speaker.
Oblique sphere (Astron. & Geog.), the celestial or terrestrial sphere when its axis is oblique to the horizon of the place; or as it appears to an observer at any point on the earth except the poles and the equator.
Oblique step (Mil.), a step in marching, by which the soldier, while advancing, gradually takes ground to the right or left at an angle of about 25°. It is not now practiced.
Oblique system of coordinates (Anal. Geom.), a system in which the coordinate axes are oblique to each other.



noun
Oblique  n.  (Geom.) An oblique line.



verb
Oblique  v. i.  (past & past part. obliqued; pres. part. obliquing)  
1.
To deviate from a perpendicular line; to move in an oblique direction. "Projecting his person towards it in a line which obliqued from the bottom of his spine."
2.
(Mil.) To march in a direction oblique to the line of the column or platoon; formerly accomplished by oblique steps, now by direct steps, the men half-facing either to the right or left.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Oblique" Quotes from Famous Books



... river, about half a mile from the starting point. Here the current was extremely strong, and this broke the whirling eddy, and gave the raft some stability. John and Wilson seized their oars again, and managed to push it in an oblique direction. This brought them nearer to the left shore. They were not more than fifty fathoms from it, when Wilson's oar snapped short off, and the raft, no longer supported, was dragged away. John ...
— In Search of the Castaways • Jules Verne

... knots in the hour. The sea got up as they receded from the land, and everything indicated a gale, though one of no great violence. Night was approaching, and an Alpine-like range of icebergs was glowing, to the northward, under the oblique rays of the setting sun. For a considerable space around the vessels, the water was clear, not even a cake of any sort being to be seen; and the question arose in Daggett's mind, whether he ought to stand on, or to heave-to and ...
— The Sea Lions - The Lost Sealers • James Fenimore Cooper

... perpendicularly; and the other, horizontally: the work of the two saws being terminated, the pannel was found to be reduced to the thickness of 4-1/2 lines. The artist then made use of a plane of a convex form on its breadth: with this instrument he planed the pannel in an oblique direction, in order to take off very short shavings, and to avoid the grain of the wood: by these means he reduced the pannel to 2/3 of a line in thickness. He then took a flat plane with a toothed iron, whose effect is much like that of a ...
— Paris As It Was and As It Is • Francis W. Blagdon

... fretted past endurance by the situation, Judith permitted herself some oblique hints and suggestions, on the heels of which she left to prepare his breakfast. Returning to the sick-room with the bowl of broth, she met the strange, unexpected, unsolicited reply to all these withheld demands. Creed greeted her ...
— Judith of the Cumberlands • Alice MacGowan

... remained under the covert of mighty willows that dipped their leaves into the wave. Looking through the green interstices of the foliage, he saw at the far end of the lawn, on a curving bank by which the glittering tide shot oblique, a simple arbour—an arbour like that from which he had looked upon summer stars five years ago—not so densely covered with the honeysuckle; still the honeysuckle, recently trained there, was fast creeping up the sides; and through the trellis of the woodwork and the leaves of the flowering shrub, ...
— What Will He Do With It, Complete • Edward Bulwer-Lytton


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