very good question, i noticed that too! wierd
olyvia is a person with scoliosisher back is curved 49 degrees
a ice cream scoop is like a spoon but it is more curved in and it scoops out icr cream this is a picture of one
Test scores can be curved effectively by adjusting the scores based on the overall performance of the test takers. This can help account for variations in difficulty and ensure a fair evaluation of everyone's performance.
Curved or crooked refers to something that deviates from a straight line, exhibiting a bend, twist, or irregularity in shape. This can apply to physical objects, such as a curved road or a crooked picture frame, as well as abstract concepts, like a crooked argument or a dishonest action. In essence, it implies a lack of straightness or uniformity.
a curved seam is a seam that is curved
A curved line is a line that is curved.
The front curved piece is called the Brush bow. Hope this helps :) http://personal.my180.net/thesmiths/iditarod/sledparts.html Enter this website to view a ful labelled picture of a Dog sled.
Basically, we don't know if spacetime is overall flat, or overall curved, nor if it's curved HOW it's curved.
the bones are rigid --------- I think a better way to answer this is they are rigid, but both curved and straight. Have you ever seen a picture of the femur, the pelvis, or the scapula? What about the clavicle? These bones, as all bones are, are rigid. They hold their shape (unlike the cartilage of the ear or nose) but are curved. A rigid straight bone could be named as the phalanges, or the humerus (MAYBE). I mean, even the radius and ulna are curved a small amount.
The surface of the earth is the outside of a sphere, whereas the pages of an atlas are flat. Right there, you have the fundamental problem common to all maps ... how best to represent a curved surface on a flat picture. The answer is: In order to select one characteristic to depict accurately, you have to distort most everything else.
A mirror that is curved outward is convex. A mirror that is curved inward is concave.
When you look into a fishbowl or any curved glass container, the light bends as it passes through the curved surface, causing the objects inside to appear distorted or magnified. This distortion is due to the refraction of light at the curved boundary between air and glass, altering the way the objects are perceived by your eyes.