Corner in a sentence as a noun

It's nice to hear this kind of device review from a corner you don't usually hear it from.

I'd type a number, two seconds later it would be ringing in the bottom right corner.

Nitpicker's corner: it doesn't actually send the email, it focuses the send button.

To undo your actions you have to go to every corner of that mountain and gather all the feathers.

""Oh, you have the annoying chat box that hovers in the bottom corner and hides things I actually wanted to see?

The next location was a Target, literally around the corner.

If the market felt dgety, if people were scared or desperate, he herded them like sheep into a corner, then made them pay for their uncertainty.

Corner in a sentence as a verb

Legalize it and then spend money and make laws regulating consumption, it would greatly reduce the misery in our corner of the world.

And if you want something not in English, you have to find the nigh-undiscoverable 'roll over top right corner' to have the language selecter appear.

But you had to specifically opt out of this, which was done by ticking a very small box in the corner, in which case the prices for a single order would quadruple or something.

Although Google's Android apps are well-designed, they don't look like a team of visual designers hand-crafted each and every corner like Apple's apps and UIKit widgets seem to be.

Now, we have a much more well-specified English language spec that explicitly addresses the challenges of the grammar, with a test suite that does a much better job of covering the corner cases, and much better default implementations.

The book's protagonist has this to say:"Now, I am living out my life in my corner, taunting myself with the spiteful and useless consolation that an intelligent man cannot become anything seriously, and it is only the fool who becomes anything.

Corner definitions

noun

a place off to the side of an area; "he tripled to the rightfield corner"; "the southeastern corner of the Mediterranean"

noun

the point where two lines meet or intersect; "the corners of a rectangle"

noun

an interior angle formed by two meeting walls; "a piano was in one corner of the room"

See also: nook

noun

the intersection of two streets; "standing on the corner watching all the girls go by"

noun

the point where three areas or surfaces meet or intersect; "the corners of a cube"

noun

a small concavity

See also: recess recession niche

noun

a temporary monopoly on a kind of commercial trade; "a corner on the silver market"

noun

a predicament from which a skillful or graceful escape is impossible; "his lying got him into a tight corner"

noun

a projecting part where two sides or edges meet; "he knocked off the corners"

noun

a remote area; "in many corners of the world they still practice slavery"

noun

(architecture) solid exterior angle of a building; especially one formed by a cornerstone

See also: quoin

verb

gain control over; "corner the gold market"

verb

force a person or an animal into a position from which he cannot escape

See also: tree

verb

turn a corner; "the car corners"