Porthole in a sentence as a noun

Airplanes fly high and have tiny porthole windows.

The "bridge" at the top of the hill could have an observation skylight/porthole like the Enterprise has.

It's just some unhappy employee's porthole and it seems to be too successful to dismiss.

A nice little artistic touch: If you go straight down from the beginning of the Jules Verne logo, there's a bunch of corals which fill the Google porthole perfectly.

Or is it a kind of necessary real object rather than a digitized version of what you can see though the portholes?I mean, adding porthole probably adds challenges to the design, no?Guess it’s the “saw it with my own eyes” thing.

Sitting in a chair, looking out a porthole, seeing the sky darken to stars, maybe being allowed to get up and experience microgravity the same as various amusement park rides or the vomit commit wave flying plane, then sitting in your seat for the ride back down.

On the left, a picture of a swole doge labeled "Japanese architect building a little dental office in the 1980s".Balloon: "We will have custom framing on the oversize porthole windows on all floors, riveted metal bands on the first two floors to create a rhythm, before the turrets erupt out of inverted cones on the third floor, suggesting teeth, but also the prows of ships swept by the wind, it's going to be awesome!

Pay no attention to the challenges of having a wide enough AR field of view so that it doesn’t seem like you’re looking through a porthole, of having a wide enough brightness range so that virtual images look right both at the beach and in a coal mine, of antialiasing virtual edges into the real world, and of doing all of the above with a hardware package that’s stylish enough to wear in public, ergonomic enough to wear all the time, and capable of running all day without a recharge.

Porthole definitions

noun

a window in a ship or airplane

noun

an opening (in a wall or ship or armored vehicle) for firing through

See also: port embrasure