Having the equatorial diameter greater than the polar diameter; being flattened at the poles.
1He came back with a handful of dark green oblate leaves, chewing something.
2When Sext was over Durtal went to rejoin the oblate.
3At this junction two of our Brothers died, a lay Brother and an oblate.
4Alterative optical and mechanical explanations are offered for the oblate shapes of aphakic eyes.
5The results of the measures thus obtained confirmed the theoretical expectation of the oblate form.
6He weighed it in his hand, an oblate spheroid, difficult to serve, harder to return.
7The oblate idea was rather fervid and naive, but I kept my feelings to myself.
8And the oblate went up to his cell, while Durtal went towards the large pond.
9Monodisperse ULV reform on heating of the oblate ellipsoids.
10The oblate bowed his head and did not reply.
11As the crew stepped onto the moving roadway, an oblate sun rouged away night's bruises.
12The Earth is not a perfect sphere, but an oblate spheroid flattened at the poles.
13The license plate is just an oblate blur, overwhelmed by the glow of the taillight.
14You look like the oblate and your rumps too.
15Be a Benedictine Father or oblate, a black Friar.
16Instead, the Earth is more like an oblate spheroid.