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Definition of Fisheye
1. Adjective. Of or relating to a fisheye lens.
Definition of Fisheye
1. Noun. An unfriendly or suspicious glance. ¹
2. Noun. An undesirable effect in paint, particularly automotive finishes, normally caused by oil or other contaminants on the painted surface. ¹
3. Adjective. (photography of a lens) Covering an extremely wide angle and producing a circular image that is distorted towards the edges. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fisheye
1. a suspicious stare [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fisheye
Literary usage of Fisheye
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Cayman Islands Alive 2nd Ed by Paris Permenter, John Bigley (2003)
"fisheye OF CAYMAN Seven Mile Beach tr 345-945-4209, fax 345-945-4208 www.fisheye.com
... fisheye offers several services, from instruction to rentals. ..."
2. Best Dives of the Caribbean by Joyce Huber (2006)
"fisheye of Cayman offers scuba tours aboard three custom dive boats to the ...
IT 800-887-8569, 345-945-4209, fax 345-945-4208, www.fisheye.com, fisheye ..."
3. Best Dives of the Western Hemisphere by Joyce Huber (1999)
"fisheye of Cayman offers scuba tours aboard three custom dive boats to the ...
Website: www.fisheye.com. « 800-887-8569, 345-945-4209, fax 345-945-4208. ..."
4. Hackoff.com: An Historic Murder Mystery Set in the Internet Bubble and Rubble by Tom Evslin (2006)
"Dom clips this frame into the edit buffer and fast forwards to the time after
Donna is left when the camera is back to its fisheye view. ..."
5. Unified Medical Language System: Current Bibliographies in Medicine (Jan by Catherine R. Selden, Betsy L. Humphreys (1997)
"Komorowski HJ, Greenes RA, Pattison-Gordon E. The use of fisheye views for ...
One approach, the use of the 'fisheye view' for displaying a region of ..."
6. Galileo, the Tour Guide: A Summary of the Mission to Date edited by Jean H. Aichele (1997)
"Two sensitive photodiodes were placed behind two fisheye lenses that looked out
perpendicular to the spin axis of the probe, 180 degrees apart, ..."