oval
noun
- shape
adjective
- shape
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈəʊvəl/ / /ˈoʊvəl/
adj
Etymology: From Late Latin ovalis, from ovum; cognate with French and Italian ovale, Dutch ovaal. From 1570.
- Having the shape of an oval.
- Of or pertaining to an ovum.
“oval conceptions”
“Every congenital abnormality is doubtless due to a peculiarity in the sperm or oval elements or in their mingling, or to some disturbance in their early development.”
name
- A cricket ground in South London.
- Ellipsis of Oval Office.
“We went to the Oval and Trump came in almost immediately […]”
“Musk, wearing a black “DOGE” cap and black “Dogefather” T-shirt, looked around the Oval, which Trump has tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop, and gushed that it “finally has the majesty that it deserves, thanks to the president.””
noun
Etymology: From Late Latin ovalis, from ovum; cognate with French and Italian ovale, Dutch ovaal. From 1570.
- An elongated round shape resembling an ellipse or an egg.
“Near-synonym: ellipse”
- An elongated round shape resembling an ellipse or an egg.
- A thing having such a shape, such as an arena.
“At the far end of the wide corridor were the doors of a ward. The panels were frosted save for ovals of clear glass at face level.”
- A sports field, typically but not exclusively oval in shape.
- In a projective plane, a set of points such that no three are collinear and there is a unique tangent line at each point.