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13 Sentences With "A line cut"

How to use A line cut in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "A line cut" and check conjugation/comparative form for "A line cut". Mastering all the usages of "A line cut" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The dress, with it's a-line cut and sparkly strap, complemented her flawless features perfectly.
From designer Tanya Taylor, the dress has an adorable a-line cut and flared sleeves to match.
Scroll through to find your perfect A-line cut — sure to become another morning commuter's bob inspiration this summer.
If you want a more traditional silhouette, this Orolay jacket features a slimmer A-line cut and less dramatic pockets.
Atkin posted a photo of the change on Instagram, showing Dewan's slightly A-line cut grazing the nape of her neck.
In his time, there was always someone taking offense, wanting a name changed or a line cut, demanding that the players be rounded up and thrown in prison.
You may have heard the term before, but what exactly is an A-line cut, who is it good for, and why is it spiking in popularity right now?
In this case, the American Horror Story actress's top of choice proved sleek under the A-line cut of the dress and added a layer of winter-ready appeal to the outfit.
Though Davenport (it's no spoiler to say) eventually gets his man, wrapping the investigation up neatly and gaining the respect of at least one white officer (Jerry O'Connell) in the process, he also delivers, in a single tossed-off line — a line cut from the movie — Fuller's frightful kicker.
High cheekbones are pronounced zygomatic arches, causing the upper part of the cheeks to jut out and form a line cut into the sides of the face. High cheekbones, forming a symmetrical face shape, are very common in fashion models and may be considered a beauty trait in both males and females within Eurocentric societies.
Multiple cameras can take different shots of a live situation as the action unfolds chronologically and is suitable for shows which require a live audience. For this reason, multiple camera productions can be filmed or taped much faster than single camera. Single-camera productions are shot in takes and various setups with components of the action repeated several times and out of sequence; the action is not enacted chronologically so is unsuitable for viewing by a live audience. In multiple-camera television, the director creates a line cut by instructing the technical director (vision mixer in UK terminology) to switch between the feeds from the individual cameras.
Starting at Kanashen, they canoed up all the major eastward flowing tributaries: the Kuyuwini, Kassikaityu, Kamoa and Sipu rivers, as well as the Chadikar River which on the basis of its north-south trend and a larger flow of water is considered to be the source of the Essiquibo rather than the eastward flowing Sipu River. In his memoirs Richard Johnson records how he had a line cut through the forest to a small hill near the Chodikar headwaters so that he could stand on the border defined by the watershed, and when he told his line-cutting team that they were looking south across the forest into Brazil his foreman disagreed on the basis that "there are lots of nightclubs in Brazil." After mapping the tributaries the two teams joined forces and travelled down the Essequibo to its confluence with the Rupununi river at Apoteri.Berrangé, J. P. & Johnson, R. L. 1972.
Though the word "abscissa" (Latin; "linea abscissa", "a line cut off") has been used at least since De Practica Geometrie published in 1220 by Fibonacci (Leonardo of Pisa), its use in its modern sense may be due to Venetian mathematician Stefano degli Angeli in his work Miscellaneum Hyperbolicum, et Parabolicum of 1659. In his 1892 work ' ("Lectures on history of mathematics"), volume 2, German historian of mathematics Moritz Cantor writes: > > At the same time it was presumably by [Stefano degli Angeli] that a word > was introduced into the mathematical vocabulary for which especially in > analytic geometry the future proved to have much in store. […] We know of no > earlier use of the word abscissa in Latin original texts. Maybe the word > appears in translations of the Apollonian conics, where [in] Book I, Chapter > 20 there is mention of ἀποτεμνομέναις, for which there would hardly be a > more appropriate Latin word than . The use of the word “ordinate” is related to the Latin phrase “linea ordinata applicata”, or “line applied parallel”.

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