It is what happens to your silhouette when excess flab is forced upwards and outwards by trousers that are at least two sizes too small. |
|
I assume all doors in public places open outwards, for fire safety reasons. |
|
It grows from the centre outwards, and the cells enclosed in the middle are cut off from the supply stream. |
|
Tango wafts from his radio, his kitchen window is open, and his organdy curtains flutter outwards. |
|
Irving claimed that it was standard practice at the time that air raid shelters should have doors which opened outwards. |
|
They quickly spread outwards into ten lights in each direction, and then converged into two lights as if lining up. |
|
Unfortunately, however, kids today are not just growing upwards, they are growing outwards. |
|
The dome is typically convex in shape and ice flows radially from the centre outwards. |
|
She had only walked for a few moments before the tunnel opened outwards into a cavern the size of a football stadium. |
|
The windscreen wipers sweep from the centre outwards to give truly remarkable coverage. |
|
Quietly the boats were launched, plashing outwards towards that blue light that shimmered starlike in the blackness. |
|
It is certainly one of the strangest sights seeing someone's belly distend outwards as it is pushed from the inside. |
|
Where the old car had concave surfaces on the doors, the new doors swell outwards, lending more bulk to the profile. |
|
Poised on the western periphery of Europe, Portugal has always been on the edge, looking outwards. |
|
From the hips it flowed outwards, swishing around her legs and adding more grace to her already slim figure. |
|
He doesn't even have time to react before the wave of hot gases and debris hits him, flying outwards at near supersonic speeds. |
|
It may help to lie still on their back with the knee bent outwards on the painful side, and their foot pointed away from the body. |
|
The plastic window structure is bending outwards, leaving a gap of almost half an inch. |
|
Most biographers hope to start with the hearts and minds of their subjects and work outwards to reveal the shape of their lives. |
|
When applying mascara, drag the wand outwards to the outer upper corner to open up eyes further. |
|
|
Pull one of your feet up to your rear, and turn the foot outwards away from the body. |
|
The ring spreads outwards and the centre may heal and go back to a normal skin colour. |
|
Incidentely, in an episode of my anger turning outwards I almost lamped a youth in a shop today. |
|
She's really focussed on looking outwards rather than inward and she's prepared to push innovative measures through the Scottish parliament. |
|
When a ledged and braced boarded door is used as an external door, the boards should face outwards. |
|
From 230,000 miles away, the moon's gravity pulls the Earth, dragging the ocean outwards in a bulge of water that creates a tide. |
|
The inner and outer margins of the annulus were observed to bulge outwards but when the nucleus was removed the inner margins bulged inwards. |
|
It was pure white, with a fitted bodice that flared gently outwards to form the dress. |
|
One snap later and he was free, climbing upwards and outwards, the sprite's dagger clutched between his teeth. |
|
Feel its vital life force surging through your system, obliterating anger and irritation, radiating peace outwards from your heart. |
|
The racket will approach the ball from the inside and swing outwards towards the right of where the ball is intended to travel. |
|
When mature, the tree forms a huge dome of massive spreading branches that arch outwards. |
|
Weak arcs of scorching lightning zapped outwards, rapidly fading over the short distance. |
|
The line flared brilliant white, and then the great gates fell outwards with a rolling crash. |
|
If the same movement starts to angle your knees outwards, towards your little toes, then you supinate. |
|
The frog kick is the underwater equivalent of the breast-stroke leg kick, with the legs moving inwards and outwards in a circular motion. |
|
No empire could last for long if it depended entirely on naked power exerted from the centre outwards. |
|
The angled cross-sectional profile of the building appears to bellow or expand outwards. |
|
A typical Baroque violin or viol bow had a finely tapered snakewood stick, almost straight or slightly curved outwards. |
|
The whirlpool rippled outwards, smoothed itself out and revealed a picture of Holly in a cute miniskirt and a crop top. |
|
|
The air flexed outwards from the tip of the staff, stealing the breath from the room. |
|
Most of the midships area has collapsed in on itself, the weight buckling the hull outwards. |
|
He jumped into the air closing his arms around himself for an instant then throwing them outwards sending a shock wave back down at me. |
|
New Zealand is a small country which must look outwards and be open to new ideas. |
|
The Buddha always pointed inwards to the mind, teaching that the effects of such practice could radiate outwards universally. |
|
All around, viewports and computer screens spider-webbed and exploded outwards, showering glass everywhere. |
|
Di Giorgio Martini's fortress walls splay outwards, down to the sea to repel marauding buccaneers. |
|
They started their look around from the pub on the edge of the city centre heading outwards into the suburbs. |
|
Her eyes took on a deep rose hue, golden spokes radiating outwards from her pupils, creating an eerie starburst effect. |
|
Sitting by the window and looking outwards, I noticed how very still it was yesterday. |
|
I looked outwards towards the street in time to see a black limo pull up to the curb. |
|
The male differs greatly from the female in colour, and in the form of its tail, which is lyrate, or has the outer feathers longer and curved outwards. |
|
As in the case of the No.2 reduction gear, the three layshafts appeared to have been spread outwards at the rear, and forced forwards relative to the annulus gear. |
|
A ring of flames emerged from the center, and traveled outwards. |
|
I'm fascinated by the period of early romanticism, when the composers of the time continued to inhabit some classical conventions but work outwards from within those. |
|
The tail is pushed outwards from the Sun by the solar wind and radiation pressure, and so the popular conception that a comet's tail streams away behind it is wrong. |
|
The foot is normally structured so that the big toe is naturally in line with the long bone leading up to it and all the toes spread outwards from this. |
|
Eventually, it creaked to a juddering, shrieking stop and a huge door, rust-pitted, streaked with red and belled outwards with age ground slowly aside. |
|
There was a click, a loud snap, then the door swung silently outwards. |
|
This is a chart where the main heading is circled in the middle of a piece of paper, and arrows stretch outwards in various directions to more circles containing sub-headings. |
|
|
But the door opened outwards and the pull on the wire was holding it shut. |
|
When you don't want to look at yourself, deflect the blame outwards. |
|
They turn the book outwards so that everyone can see the pictures. |
|
Then working outwards from the centre, the remaining collapse and infill material would be removed and all voids re-filled with properly compacted chalk. |
|
Pinching outwards on the start screen will make the whole display zoom out and give you an overview of every app that you've got on the start screen. |
|
This energy is transported outwards by convection and radiation until it reaches the surface, where the temperature is believed to be 5,800 degrees Celsius. |
|
A heavy object leaned against the door's flywire, forcing it outwards. |
|
The gerontic whorl of gastropod genera of the subfamily Mitchelliinae is twisted both outwards and backwards, but not upwards as in members of the subfamily Scoliostomatinae. |
|
Rapid growth of the inner and basal parts of the apertural margin during their late shell ontogeny caused twisting of the gerontic whorl both outwards and backwards. |
|
They were to be created from local limestone, sandstone and gritstone and each cairn was to feature a spiral design of dry stone walls emanating outwards. |
|
Before this both Linus Pauling and Watson and Crick had generated erroneous models with the chains inside and the bases pointing outwards. |
|
Ellis realised that if it were to fend off its competitors it must expand outwards. |
|
The firing is begun at the bottom of the flue, and gradually spreads outwards and upwards. |
|
In a radial drainage system, the streams radiate outwards from a central high point. |
|
To achieve this, the ground floor was extended outwards behind the mill often a full mill width. |
|
Most Maya cities tended to grow outwards from the core, and upwards as new structures were superimposed upon preceding architecture. |
|
Columbus simply expanded the triangle outwards, and his route became the main way for Europeans to reach, and return from, the Americas. |
|
These roads have been numbered either outwards from or clockwise around their respective hubs, depending on their alignment. |
|
The Mongol people were plagued by internecine conflict until Genghis Khan unified them and focused their aggression outwards on other peoples. |
|
The centrifugal force acts outwards in the radial direction and is proportional to the distance of the body from the axis of the rotating frame. |
|
|
The field extends outwards from the core, through the mantle, and up to Earth's surface, where it is, approximately, a dipole. |
|
Much of this resulted in fixed settlements from which many, under a powerful leader, expanded outwards. |
|
There is a surface current inwards in the eastern channel, but a strong undercurrent outwards in the western channel. |
|
Some smaller iris species have all six lobes pointing straight outwards, but generally limb and standards differ markedly in appearance. |
|
I would also recommend uprights or fastigiate plants, as these will grow upwards and not outwards, giving the illusion of more space. |
|
In a sense, this is the enactive perspective, but turned both inwards and outwards. |
|
As the dilating heart becomes more spherical, the papillary muscles displaces outwards and towards the apex. |
|
Diverticula are small, light-bulb-shaped pouches in the bowel wall, resulting from the tissue in the gut bulging outwards under pressure. |
|
The crushed ore, suspended in water was introduced onto a central cone and spread outwards over a slightly inclined conical surface. |
|
The bulbs develop from the inside, pushing the older layers outwards which become brown and dry, forming an outer shell, the tunic or skin. |
|
Suburban communities began to develop and towns began to spread outwards. |
|
A Many people just snap off the old flower but you really should prune back further down the stem to a bud in the leaf axil facing outwards to open up the bush. |
|
It was pointed at the tip, and whilst its dorsum was haired the opposite surface was hairless, hollowed out into a concha and directed forwards and outwards. |
|
With film making and movies slowly starting to become more popular within Kurdistan, the passion and dedication put into each movie is slowly reaching outwards. |
|
Like tree rings, magmatic crystals typically grow from the centre outwards and provide experts with plenty of information about the volcano's history. |
|