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angular ADJ

angular MATH
angular MATH
angular MATH
angular MATH
angular MATH
angular MATH
angular MATH
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular ANAT
angular MATH
angular (shapes)
angular (shapes)
angular (shapes)

angular acceleration

angular altitude SUPERFIC

angular aperture PHOTO

angular cutter ARCHIT

angular deviation

angular diameter

angular disconformity

angular discrimination MILIT

angular displacement

angular distance SUPERFIC

angular distortion SUPERFIC

angular divergence

angular equation SUPERFIC

angular frequency COMMUNIC

angular height

angular height SUPERFIC
angular height SUPERFIC

angular impulse PHYS

angular inconformity

angular length TEC

angular magnification SUPERFIC

Exemples monolingues (non-vérifiés par l'équipe de rédaction)

anglais
Jones' head is sharpened, giving her head and face an angular shape.
en.wikipedia.org
For the first time, he allowed curved forms to break up his more usual angular shapes.
en.wikipedia.org
The total survey sky area is of 1 square degree (0.30 msr) distributed in different high latitude and low extinction fields with enough angular separations.
en.wikipedia.org
The angular velocity ratio between two gears of a gearset must remain constant throughout the mesh.
en.wikipedia.org
On the ends there are short, angular sections of wall.
en.wikipedia.org
Driving in a car, and looking forward, each of the wheels has an angular momentum vector pointing to the left.
en.wikipedia.org
The rostral is large and broad with an angular horizontal edge.
en.wikipedia.org
Each electron has electron spin angular momentum and in addition the p orbital has orbital angular momentum (an s orbital has zero orbital angular momentum).
en.wikipedia.org
A number of quantities in physics behave as pseudovectors rather than polar vectors, including magnetic field and angular velocity.
en.wikipedia.org
It is the angular distance of the orbital plane from the plane of reference (usually the primary's equator or the ecliptic), normally stated in degrees.
en.wikipedia.org

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