Slanting in a sentence as an adjective

I really like the cube slanting to show motion, too.

My friends that get the paper delivered are disgusted by the slanting of the news, since the purchase.

This is hardly new. "60 Minutes" was infamous in the 1960s for the egregious slanting of their segments.

I got the accessory kit with the wrist rests and slanting mechanism at the same time as the keyboard, so that part's not an issue.

The leg reveals which way the lighting is coming from - above, slightly to the left, and probably slanting slightly into the camera.

Somehow slanting user comments towards "migration stories" would be even more useful.

Only when the force on the sail is at an slanting angle to the keel, the 'drag reduction' comes into play and boat moves at a direction of least resistance.

It's makes convictions harder, slanting the system towards "letting 100 criminals walk free to prevent convicting 1 innocent".

Aggregating and slanting news for a specific demographic is another.

He's not 'slanting' this piece to trick readers into supporting a position that would actually harm them; instead, he is merely telling the story from his perspective.

Hence the MS invention of Metro interface and the new shallow-slanting all-in-one devices to avoid gorilla-arm.

After all, the lines actually are slanted; the higher the frame rate, the fewer degrees they're slanted at the same scroll speed, but whether we notice the slanting is independent of the frame rate.

More than the stories themselves, there's the incidental commentary, that that's definitely slanting toward the "ewww ... creepy" direction rather than "oh!

It's not simply that they'd vote the way their parents wanted them to, thus slanting the outcome, it's that they'd be targeted by political pressure --- from their parents, teachers, peers, and the media --- in ways that they aren't today.

And why follow a comment agreeing that astroturf campaigns are employed with one slanting those pointing it out as 'spooks' and 'paranoid'?I think it's worth reminding fellow readers that this sort of manipulation happens, and likely on HN.

Let's assume a long-term New York Times veteran lied in the paper, intentionallyIf anything, I think that some veteran reporters get full of themselves and become unafraid of slanting things according to their biases as they get older.

Slanting definitions

adjective

having an oblique or slanted direction

See also: aslant aslope diagonal slanted sloped sloping