The 1 - inch slits sit typically where you might grip the tablet when gaming, so they can get
obscured by your fingers, unless you flip it upside down (with the Sony logo upside down and at the bottom).
The 1 - inch slits sit typically where you might grip the tablet when gaming, so they can get
obscured by your fingers, unless you flip it upside down (with the Sony logo upside down and at the bottom).
The rear - facing camera doesn't offer a knockout feature like OIS and the lens is easily
obscured by your finger.
Not exact matches
This challenge led to a
finger - wagging review
by Hitchens in The Atlantic and a series of punch - counterpunch exchanges in various transatlantic venues, all of which
obscured both the thoughtfulness of Amis» meditations on grief and his discovery of the depths of human depravity: «Hitler - Stalin tells us this, among other things: given total power over another, the human being will find his thoughts turn to torture.»
The deeper I look into myself the more clearly I become aware of this psychological truth: that no man would lift his little
finger to attempt the smallest task unless he were spurred on
by a more or less
obscure conviction that in some infinitesimally tiny way he is contributing, at least indirectly, to the building up of something permanent — in other words, to your own work, Lord.
A pair of gray suede gloves abandoned on a department store counter; a small 35 mm still camera
obscuring a woman's face except for her eyes; an electric train set; a
finger on the disconnect button of a telephone; an ungloved, well - manicured hand resting briefly on another woman's shoulder: Todd Haynes's Carol is not a Hitchcockian thriller, although it is adapted from the second novel
by Patricia Highsmith, whose first, Strangers on a Train, was the basis for one of the master of suspense's great movies.
You may need to feel with your
fingers as they are usually
obscured by fur.
It is a striking image: a robed and hooded man, seated and slightly hunched, his stubby
fingers resting gently in his lap, his face
obscured by an...