Sentences with phrase «convex side»

The phrase "convex side" refers to the outwardly curved or rounded part of an object or shape. Full definition
The split standard / convex side mirrors are on the smaller side here but the blind - spot monitoring is a worthy extra.
Thankfully, Ram had fitted the 2500 with extra convex side - view mirrors, allowing me to constantly keep an eye on the corners of the truck.
Visibility is aided by the glazed side door but the centre seat's headrest and the aft barn doors restrict vision to the rear, while the split standard / convex side mirrors are excellent.
In the eastern Alaska Range, higher topography and greater exhumation are found north of the fault, on its convex side - not an expected pattern at all and very puzzling.»
In crescent - moon shaped wells, new tubules sprouted only toward the convex side of the well, and in Y - shaped wells, tubules branched at the tips of the Y, but not along the sides or in the middle.
With the convex side facing up, use a potato peeler to remove the skin from the leaf.
Both of these spinal curves are examples of a singular C curve — one concave side, which curves inward and is shortened, and one convex side, which is lengthened and rounded laterally.
Often the concave side is tighter, and the convex side is longer and weaker.»
Some recommend that yoga students with scoliosis practice a pose on one side and not the other in order to strengthen the convex side and lengthen the concave side.
But in some cases of scoliosis, there are S curves; for example, the right thoracic curve may be accompanied by a left lumbar curve, making an S shape, with two concave sides and two convex sides.
Because there were no major mechanical upgrades the new Mahindra drives just like the old one, although the seats are more comfortable, especially in the back, and the convex side mirrors make it easier to see around you.
Meanwhile, the voidlike burgundy circle, traced in royal blue, nearly resembles a rectangle with a convex side (it's that huge) except for two tiny white corners on the painting's extreme left, forcing the circular shape to retain its Euclidean stability.
With one concave and one convex side and another convex side made of perforated stainless steel, the pavilion affords intricate reflections changing from elongation to contraction.
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