Definition of oblique - What it is, Meaning and Concept

The term oblique comes from the Latin word obliquus .It is an adjective that refers to what departs from a vertical or horizontal line .

The term is often used in the field of geometry to refer to the line or the plane that, when cutting to another line or another plane, creates an angle that is not straight (that is, does not measure 90º).


Angles that are not straight and that are not multiples of a right angle, in fact, are called oblique angles .This means that acute angles (which measure more than 0º and less than 90º) and the obtuse angles (more than 90º and less than 180º) are oblique angles.

In the field of the grammar , there is talk of oblique case to mention the case marked by a preposition or that, in certain bicasual declines, is opposite to the rectum.


A case is a grammatical category that, appealing to flexive marks, allows the expression of different syntactic links.The oblique case is usually used in a pronoun or in a noun that does not act as subject of a prayer.


It's called slash , slash or simply bar to a punctuation mark which is a line diagonal drawn from left to right and from the bottom up.This sign was popularized thanks to Internet , as it is included in the addresses of the websites.


The backslash reverse , backslash , backslash or counterbar , meanwhile write from right to left and from top to down .

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