Squint - определение. Что такое Squint
Diclib.com
Словарь ChatGPT
Введите слово или словосочетание на любом языке 👆
Язык:

Перевод и анализ слов искусственным интеллектом ChatGPT

На этой странице Вы можете получить подробный анализ слова или словосочетания, произведенный с помощью лучшей на сегодняшний день технологии искусственного интеллекта:

  • как употребляется слово
  • частота употребления
  • используется оно чаще в устной или письменной речи
  • варианты перевода слова
  • примеры употребления (несколько фраз с переводом)
  • этимология

Что (кто) такое Squint - определение

THE ACTION OF LOOKING AT SOMETHING WITH PARTIALLY CLOSED EYES
Squinting
  • A man squinting on a sunny day
Найдено результатов: 32
squint         
v. (D; intr.) to squint at
squint         
v. n.
Look askant, look askance, look obliquely.
squint         
¦ verb
1. look at someone or something with partly closed eyes.
partly close (one's eyes).
2. have a squint affecting one eye.
¦ noun
1. a permanent deviation in the direction of the gaze of one eye.
2. informal a quick or casual look.
3. an oblique opening through a wall in a church permitting a view of the altar.
¦ adjective chiefly Scottish not straight or level.
Derivatives
squinter noun
squinty adjective
Origin
C16: shortening of asquint.
squint         
(squints, squinting, squinted)
1.
If you squint at something, you look at it with your eyes partly closed.
The girl squinted at the photograph...
The bright sunlight made me squint...
He squinted his eyes and looked at the floor.
VERB: V prep/adv, V, V n
2.
If someone has a squint, their eyes look in different directions from each other.
N-COUNT
Squint         
·noun Fig.: Looking askance.
II. Squint ·noun The act or habit of squinting.
III. Squint ·vi To deviate from a true line; to run obliquely.
IV. Squint ·noun ·same·as Hagioscope.
V. Squint ·vt To cause to look with noncoincident optic axes.
VI. Squint ·noun A want of coincidence of the axes of the eyes; strabismus.
VII. Squint ·vi To have the axes of the eyes not coincident;
- to be cross-eyed.
VIII. Squint ·vi To see or look obliquely, asquint, or awry, or with a furtive glance.
IX. Squint ·vt To turn to an oblique position; to direct obliquely; as, to squint an Eye.
X. Squint ·adj Looking obliquely. Specifically (Med.), not having the optic axes coincident;
- said of the eyes. ·see Squint, ·noun, 2.
XI. Squint ·add. ·vi To have an indirect bearing, reference, or implication; to have an allusion to, or inclination towards, something.
squinting         
n.
Strabism, strabismus.
Squinting         
·- ·adj & ·noun from Squint, v.
II. Squinting ·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Squint.
Strabismus         
  • A child with accommodative [[esotropia]] affecting the right eye
  • Fayum mummy portrait]], c. 150–200 AD
  • [[Tommaso Inghirami]]
  • [[Marty Feldman]]
  • [[Norma Shearer]]
  • A [[Balinese cat]] exhibiting [[esotropia]]
  • Strabismus correction surgery
VISUAL IMPAIRMENT
Starbismus; Medial strabismus; Heterotropia; Paralytic strabismus; Crossed eye; Bongeye; Crossed eyes; Bong eye; Wall-eyed; Wall eyed; Cock-eyed; Stravism; Stravismus; Convergence excess; Divergence insufficiency; Divergence excess; Crosseyed; Strabism; Wall eye; Strabic; Cockide; Cockeye; Cock eyed; Cock eye; Boss-eyed; Boss eyed; Strabismic; Wall-eye; Bosseyedness; Squint heterotropia; Tropia; Trobia; STBM; Fibrosing esotropia; Paralytic squint; Sensory strabismus; Cast of the eye; Squited eye; Squint eyes; Cross your eyes; Crossing your eyes
·noun An affection of one or both eyes, in which the optic axes can not be directed to the same object, - a defect due either to undue contraction or to undue relaxation of one or more of the muscles which move the eyeball; squinting; cross-eye.
wall eye         
  • A child with accommodative [[esotropia]] affecting the right eye
  • Fayum mummy portrait]], c. 150–200 AD
  • [[Tommaso Inghirami]]
  • [[Marty Feldman]]
  • [[Norma Shearer]]
  • A [[Balinese cat]] exhibiting [[esotropia]]
  • Strabismus correction surgery
VISUAL IMPAIRMENT
Starbismus; Medial strabismus; Heterotropia; Paralytic strabismus; Crossed eye; Bongeye; Crossed eyes; Bong eye; Wall-eyed; Wall eyed; Cock-eyed; Stravism; Stravismus; Convergence excess; Divergence insufficiency; Divergence excess; Crosseyed; Strabism; Wall eye; Strabic; Cockide; Cockeye; Cock eyed; Cock eye; Boss-eyed; Boss eyed; Strabismic; Wall-eye; Bosseyedness; Squint heterotropia; Tropia; Trobia; STBM; Fibrosing esotropia; Paralytic squint; Sensory strabismus; Cast of the eye; Squited eye; Squint eyes; Cross your eyes; Crossing your eyes
¦ noun
1. an eye squinting outwards.
2. an eye with a streaked or opaque white iris.
3. (walleye) a North American pikeperch with large, opaque silvery eyes. [Stizostedion vitreum.]
Derivatives
wall-eyed adjective
Origin
C16: back-form. from earlier wall-eyed, from ON vagleygr; related to Icelandic vagl 'film over the eye'.
Strabism         
  • A child with accommodative [[esotropia]] affecting the right eye
  • Fayum mummy portrait]], c. 150–200 AD
  • [[Tommaso Inghirami]]
  • [[Marty Feldman]]
  • [[Norma Shearer]]
  • A [[Balinese cat]] exhibiting [[esotropia]]
  • Strabismus correction surgery
VISUAL IMPAIRMENT
Starbismus; Medial strabismus; Heterotropia; Paralytic strabismus; Crossed eye; Bongeye; Crossed eyes; Bong eye; Wall-eyed; Wall eyed; Cock-eyed; Stravism; Stravismus; Convergence excess; Divergence insufficiency; Divergence excess; Crosseyed; Strabism; Wall eye; Strabic; Cockide; Cockeye; Cock eyed; Cock eye; Boss-eyed; Boss eyed; Strabismic; Wall-eye; Bosseyedness; Squint heterotropia; Tropia; Trobia; STBM; Fibrosing esotropia; Paralytic squint; Sensory strabismus; Cast of the eye; Squited eye; Squint eyes; Cross your eyes; Crossing your eyes
·noun Strabismus.

Википедия

Squint

Squinting is the action of looking at something with partially closed eyes.

Squinting is most often practiced by people who suffer from refractive errors of the eye who either do not have or are not using their glasses. Squinting helps momentarily improve their eyesight by slightly changing the shape of the eye to make it rounder, which helps light properly reach the fovea. Squinting also decreases the amount of light entering the eye, making it easier to focus on what the observer is looking at by removing rays of light which enter the eye at an angle and would need to otherwise be focused by the observer's faulty lens and cornea.

Pinhole glasses, which severely restrict the amount of light entering the cornea, have the same effect as squinting.

It is a common belief that squinting worsens eyesight. However, according to Robert MacLaren, a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Oxford, this is nothing more than an old wives' tale: the only damage that can be caused by squinting for long periods is a temporary headache due to prolonged contraction of the facial muscles.

Squinting is also a common involuntary reflex, especially among people with light colored eyes, during adaptation to a sudden change in lighting such as when one goes from a dark room to outdoors on a sunny day to avoid pain or discomfort of the eyes. The pupillary light reflex caused by adjustment to light takes around five minutes in people with healthy eyes, so squinting and pain after that could be a sign of photophobia.