contour

سموچ
definition
verb
the compartment has been contoured with smooth rounded corners
mold into a specific shape, typically one designed to fit into something else.
a huge contoured map
mark (a map or diagram) with contour lines.
noun
she traced the contours of his face with her finger
an outline, especially one representing or bounding the shape or form of something.
translation of 'contour'
noun
روپ
example
Dialogues varying only in their intonation 'contour' (specifically in pitch accent or boundary tone) were presented in a random order to 47 speakers of Midwestern American English.
The 'contour' of the song from order to disorder isn't exactly revolutionary, but the change is gradual enough not to be obvious on the first couple of listens.
Regardless of the words, it seems the melodic 'contour' of the song describes the nature of the land over which the song passes.
Surgeons have advanced in technique to shape and 'contour' the deeper facial tissues and resuspend them.
The teacher then modulated the intonational 'contour' until it corresponded to the first syllables of the word paleontologist.
below the 1200-ft 'contour' is a belt of limestone
The outer edge is being cut to 'contour' and then rolled into shape.
Each sentence we speak has a pitch 'contour' associated with it that can be broken down into smaller sequences of elementary contours associated with linguistic phenomena.
Yet the map shows a broad swathe of relatively flat land skirting the foothills of the mountain at the 100ft / 33m 'contour' , and extending up to Bundoran.
In Korn's unfortunate sentence, where the ambiguities are structural, a skilled speaker could easily signal the desired analysis by differences in timing, pitch 'contour' and voice quality.
Does the 'contour' of their accented tongues create a particular Hispanic laugh pattern?
For instance, on the excellent piano-driven waltz ‘Irish Elk,’ he just seems to be singing without any sense of melodic 'contour' , and he fails to deliver a convincing hook.
the movement tends to place more emphasis on rhythm than melodic 'contour'
It is noteworthy that this map closely matches the petrographic 'contours' of the geological map.
On the contrary, many compositions strive for more elaborate 'contours' , rhythms, and harmonic structures.
We want to shape the 'contours' of the research setting, by presenting the latest developments and by mapping the terrain of future exploration.
It's the shapes rather than the 'contours' which attract us in Piero's painting.
The 'contours' show that the steepest gradients surround the Earth and Sun, with the five Earth Lagrange Points located in equilibrium regions with relatively gentle gradient.
Before the invention of the fridge, the track, artfully cut into the 'contours' of the hill, was used by muleteers to haul down snow to be stored in a deep pit, which can still be seen.
More impressive still is his quicksilver dexterity in following the ever-changing 'contours' of Sibelius' form.
Kom can have as many as eight phonetic tones including 'contours' , or combinations of tones.
He was so perfectly shaped that all she wanted to do was trace the 'contours' of his musculature and well formed face.
All of his handles are 'contoured' and rounded for the ultimate in user comfort, which has become his calling card.
Intensity modulated radiotherapy is a developing new technology which can produce an even distribution of radiation dose within a target volume which follows the 'contours' of an irregularly shaped tumour.
The route continued 'contouring' the south coast, the border regions, and the north coast on return to Dili.
Triangles provide stability and curved shapes soften the 'contours' of objects.
The high back of the chair was 'contoured' specifically to his own back.
We take for granted the unique shapes and 'contours' of ourselves, as easily as we forget, or perhaps don't consider, our ancestry.
No independent existence for women outside of the patriarchal system that shaped the 'contours' of their lives was possible.
The layers can be stacked like 1-millimeter-thick pages of a book, and even 'contoured' into desired shapes prior to heating.
Credits: Google Translate