FromMiddle English angular ,anguler , fromLatin angulāris , fromangulus ( “ angle, corner ” ) . Seeangle .
angular (comparative moreangular ,superlative mostangular )
Relating or pertaining to anangle , or angles. Having an angle or angles; forming an angle or corner. Sharp-cornered ;pointed .anangular figure
2008 , Helen Gilhooly, chapter 1, inComplete Japanese [1] ,→ISBN , page31 :In overall appearance, katakana symbols are moreangular in shape and hiragana are more rounded. Here are the first five sounds of each script (a, i, u, e, o). Compare these two sets of symbols and see if you can identify these features:Hiragana あ い う え おKatakana ア イ ウ エ オ
Measured by an angle.angular distance
Lean ,lank .Ungraceful ; lackinggrace .( figuratively ) Sharp andstiff in character.He's remarkablyangular in his habits and appearance.
She is anangular female.
Synonyms: rude ,rugged ( organic chemistry ) Composed of three or morerings attached to a singlecarbon atom (the rings not all being in the same plane).relating to or forming an angle; sharp-cornered
Bulgarian:ъглест ( ǎglest ) ,ръбат ( rǎbat ) Catalan:angular Danish:kantet Dutch:hoekig (nl) Esperanto:angula ,anguleca Finnish:kulmallinen ,kulmikas (fi) ,kulma- (fi) ;teräväkulmainen (fi) ( sharp-cornered ) French:angulaire (fr) ,anguleux (fr) Galician:angular German:eckig (de) Hungarian:szögletes (hu) Icelandic:hyrndur ,skarphyrndur ,horn (is) Indonesian:lancip (id) Italian:angolare (it) Latin:angulāris Manx:uillinagh Norwegian:Bokmål:kantete ,kantet Nynorsk:kantete Polish:kanciasty (pl) m Portuguese:angular (pt) ,angulado ,anguloso (pt) Romanian:unghiular (ro) Russian:углово́й (ru) ( uglovój ) Scottish Gaelic:oiseanach Slovak:uhlový Spanish:angular (es) ,anguloso (es) ,esquinado (es) Swedish:kantig (sv) Ukrainian:кутови́й ( kutovýj )
figurative: sharp and stiff in character
angular (plural angulars )
( anatomy ) A bone in the base of the lower jaw of many birds, reptiles, and fishes.Borrowed fromLatin angulāris .
angular m or f (masculine and feminine plural angulars )
( geometry , relational ) angle ;angular Learned borrowing fromLatin angulāris .
angular m or f (plural angulares )
( geometry ) angular ( of or relating to angles ) angular ( forming an angle ) Borrowed fromLatin angulāris ( “ angular ” ) , fromangulus ( “ corner; angle ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *h₂engulos .
angular m or f (plural angulares )
( geometry ) angular ( of or relating to angles ) angular ( forming an angle ) Synonym: angulado FromÂngulo ( “ angle ” ) +-ar .
angular (first-person singular present angulo ,first-person singular preterite angulei ,past participle angulado )
tobend so it forms anangle Angulei meus joelhos. ―Ibent my knees. Meus joelhos angulam. ―My kneesare bent . 1 Brazilian Portuguese.2 European Portuguese.
Borrowed fromFrench angulaire , fromLatin angularis .
angular m or n (feminine singular angulară ,masculine plural angulari ,feminine and neuter plural angulare )
angular IPA (key ) : /anɡuˈlaɾ/ [ãŋ.ɡuˈlaɾ] Rhymes:-aɾ Syllabification:an‧gu‧lar Borrowed fromLatin angulāris .
angular m or f (masculine and feminine plural angulares )
angular Fromángulo +-ar .
angular (first-person singular present angulo ,first-person singular preterite angulé ,past participle angulado )
( transitive ) This term needs a translation to English. Please help out andadd a translation , then remove the text{{rfdef }}
. 1 Mostly obsolete, now mainly used in legal language.2 Argentine and Uruguayanvoseo prefers thetú form for the present subjunctive.