Cone in a sentence as a noun

The problem is that the coil is fastened to the cone, and so moves with it.

Real Quality must be the source of the subjects and objects, the cone from which the tree must start.

Deutans, which are 75% of cases, have a defect in the green cone cells. In this case, the defect causes the green cone cell to be spectrally shifted towards red.

Protans, which are 25% of cases, have a defect in the red cone cells. In this case, the defect causes the red cone cell to be spectrally shifted towards green.

During my time there, one person ran their Excel script sans cone and a bunch of people didn't have to pay their bill that month.

And if you were to find one, could you be certain that it were a real unicorn rather than a horse with a plastic cone stuck to its forehead?

The downward one has a 90 cone angle, and is designed so that the signal strength is even across the 40km diameter ground area.

One place, with 60000 employees, had an 'editing cone' which was an actual traffic cone that you had to have in your cube if you were writing to the Access file on the SMB drive.

Cone in a sentence as a verb

What that means is that for each point of the object you're imaging, you get a cone of light rays that are converging towards some point either in front of the sensor or behind it.

By removing the wavelengths of light where overlap is occurring between the red and green cone cells, the spectral shift can be reversed, amplifying the color signal sent to the brain.

[...] Our findings suggest that the sensitivity of the human alerting and cognitive response to polychromatic light at levels as low as 40 lux, is blue-shifted relative to the three-cone visual photopic system.

"Fighting" as I said there was actually things like snowball fights in the winter or paper-cone-in-tube or soft/rotten-fruit-in-sligshot fights in the summer, and always in a group-vs-group setting.

It took me a while to understand this, but you can't really view the light cone as something that is statically determined at a given point in time, because it depends on the geometry of space as over time.

With each successive night of observation, the orbital characteristics are determined to greater accuracy, and the cone of potential trajectories is reduced.

Another idea: take into account the movement of the mouse to define a directional cone in the general direction of the movement, which would enable you to preload your pages even before the hover state occurs.

For example, in EVE, it might be desirable to not send information about a ship if it's completely occluded by another ship, or to only send information about ships that are in a frontal cone ahead of you.

Cone definitions

noun

any cone-shaped artifact

noun

a shape whose base is a circle and whose sides taper up to a point

See also: conoid

noun

cone-shaped mass of ovule- or spore-bearing scales or bracts

See also: strobilus strobile

noun

a visual receptor cell in the retina that is sensitive to bright light and to color

verb

make cone-shaped; "cone a tire"