Use "squint" in a sentence

1. Squint.

2. 6 synonyms for Askant: askance, asquint, sidelong, squint, squint-eyed, squinty

3. 6 synonyms for Askant: askance, asquint, sidelong, squint, squint-eyed, squinty

4. "You know, squint."

5. But she didn't squint.

6. 6 synonyms for Asquint: askance, askant, sidelong, squint, squint-eyed, squinty

7. 6 synonyms for Asquint: askance, askant, sidelong, squint, squint-eyed, squinty

8. What's with the squint?

9. Johnson gave the nest a little squint.

10. Try to squint or something.

11. You shouldn't squint so much.

12. I'm takin'no drinks from you, squint.

13. Will my child outgrow the squint?

14. Clint Eastwood's trademark is his squint.

15. The bright sunlight made me squint.

16. The sun was shining Brightly, making me squint

17. Squint against Butch and me and you.

18. The bad light caused the guests to squint their eyes.

19. Wow, I could make you an honorary squint.

20. His speech shows a squint to your view.

21. Therefore we believe, that the amblyopia and also the amblyopia with excentric fixation is a form of squint “sui generis” and does not ensue necessary from other forms of squint.

22. Okay, you know what, calm down, I'll just squint then.

23. If you squint, you can still see the face.

24. If it was the father, he didn't get a squint at the Bantlings

25. Oh, I'd love to get a squint at her, the old trout!

26. I looked at him squint-eyed, then he took the picture.

27. If you squint really hard, she kind of looks like me.

28. Unless you snore or walk or breathe or squint a lot.

29. Sunlight poured in through the windows(Sentencedict), making him squint.

30. Look down when he takes the picture.That way, your squint won' t be noticeable

31. Competition between all these factors decides, whether a squint will develop or not.

32. Squint surgery in the adult patient is necessary even to day.

33. • squint – you may have a greater sensitivity to light and glare

34. Origin squint 1 (1600-1700) squint (of the eyes) “ looking in different directions ” ((16-21 centuries)), from Asquint “ across, obliquely ” ((13-19 centuries)) Exercises Vocabulary exercises help you to learn synonyms, collocations and idioms.

35. That flaw replaced our smile with a squint on one long afternoon drive.

36. In adults convergent squint may have disappeared spontaneously or by medical measures.

37. Bring your glasses or you'll have to squint through the whole movie.

38. Its expression may take the form of a latent or a manifest squint of different degree.

39. It was three months before I had the courage to even squint at my Rodney.

40. The exceptional cases where myopia of different degree predisposes for convergent squint are discussed.

41. Accurate measurement of the angle of squint can ensure the suc - cess in operations.

42. Cockeyed (adj.) 1821, "squint-eyed," perhaps from cock (v.) in some sense + eye (n.)

43. Origin of Asquint Middle English a- on a– 2 -squint skwyn (in of skwyn obliquely)

44. The same gene can manifest itself in different phenotypes of squint, with and without amblyopia.

45. Intraoperative topical 0.5% bupivacaine seems to be an alternative treatment for reducing postoperative pain in squint surgery.

46. The band's first studio album, Point #1, was released on a small record label called Squint Entertainment.

47. Twin research demonstrates the high significance of heredity as well for convergent as for divergent squint.

48. Askance, askant, Asquint, squint, squint-eyed, squinty, sidelong (adj) (used especially of glances) directed to one side with or as if with doubt or suspicion or envy "her eyes with their misted askance look"- Elizabeth Bowen; "sidelong glances" Wiktionary (0.00 / 0 votes)Rate this definition:

49. 15 George is tall, red-haired, freckled, with deep squint lines at the outside corners of his blue eyes.

50. Four photographers scampered round the podium, halting to squint through their viewfinders and freeze the scene with their flashlights.

51. Then for a hundred years or so they had tightened up, and Sam had to squint and blink to count them.

52. As for sex and squint, both sexes are susceptible, but the female sex somewhat more than the male.

53. If I remember, he was a dark young fellow, black hair and a squint in his right eye.

54. Everyone will either sympathize with your terrible squint or think that you are offering some form of invitation.

55. Askant: 1 adj (used especially of glances) directed to one side with or as if with doubt or suspicion or envy Synonyms: askance , asquint , sidelong , squint , squint-eyed , squinty indirect not direct in spatial dimension; not leading by a straight line or course to a destination

56. We may well imagine the prophet’s needing to squint and to shade his eyes as he gazed at the glorious form.

57. I give My Life as a Squint-eyed Chink five stars because I didn't stop reading until I had finished the book

58. She and Nick, and a few tough-looking boys, and an ugly girl with a squint who had two little sisters.

59. Askance, Askant, asquint, squint, squint-eyed, squinty, sidelong (adj) (used especially of glances) directed to one side with or as if with doubt or suspicion or envy "her eyes with their misted askance look"- Elizabeth Bowen; "sidelong glances" Wiktionary (0.00 / 0 votes)Rate this definition:

60. But a constant squint in a baby under three months indicates a problem and you should speak to your doctor about it.

61. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Asquint adj 1: (used especially of glances) directed to one side with or as if with doubt or suspicion or envy; "her eyes with their misted askance look"- Elizabeth Bowen; "sidelong glances" [syn: {askance}, {askant}, {Asquint}, {squint}, {squint-eyed}, {squinty}, {sidelong}]

62. Already during the first examination it is possible to prevent an opto-cinetic nystagmus produced by the apparatus of Ohm-Romberg in the majority of the squint-amblyopic persons.

63. Brandish 3 is once again very similar to its predecessors, with few noticeable additions, one being the zoomed in mini-map, so you don’t have a squint

64. Follow-up investigations of 88 patients with concomitant convergent strabismus, without amblyopia, who had worn a prismatic correction of their angle of squint for 5 to 9 days preoperatively.

65. Personal observations show that 25% of the patients develop a reversion of the horizontal squint angle, that is a convergence in abduction, respectively, a limitation of abduction during the spontaneous regeneration of the oculomotor nerve palsy.

66. Usually the after-images seen by squint-amblyopic persons move in opposite direction to the moving stripes, just as after-images observed in normal persons do. 25 to 50% of persons of all fixation types see fluctuations of after-images.

67. In 44 patients, prisms were applied for a period of 2–6.5 years irrespective of the type of squint. The success of the treatment depended on the angle at the onset that should not exceed 15° convergence or 10° divergence.

68. History and Etymology for Agley Scots Agley, aglee "obliquely, askance, awry," from a- a- entry 1 + gley, glee "to squint, look askance," going back to Old Scots gley (in the participle gleyit "squinting") & …

69. The binocular functions of 530 squinting children with a visual acuity of not less than 5/10 (0.5) in the squinting eye, have been examined in connection with the age of onset, the duration and the type of squint (strabismus alternans and strabismus unilateralis).

70. Clinically, the characteristics are (a) retino-peripheral fusion while correcting the angle of squint and (b) the rivalry of the retinal centres: despite deep amblyopia, peripheral fusion — either spontaneously or as a result of strabotomy — evokes a parallel position of the eyes and hence a central adjustment of the amblyopic eye.

71. It results from abnormal visual development in childhood, secondary to another pathological process, and can lead to permanent, usually monocular, reduced vision.1 It affects a variety of visual functions (see table 1 ⇓).The term “lazy eye” is often used, but Amblyopia should be differentiated from strabismus (squint).

72. ‘The contrail went straight up, Bisecting the Sun, forcing the crowd to squint and awkwardly block the Sun to see the contrail.’ ‘A major part of the Mid-Ocean Ridge system runs down the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, Bisecting Iceland, and separating the Eurasian and African plates in the east from the North and South American plates in