Head becoming more bulbous with age, somewhat squarish in adult males viewed from above.
They may be identified as pilot whales primarily by the robust body and bulbous head, often squarish in adult animals, and the broad-based, falcate dorsal fin located well forward on the animal's back.
They may be distinguished from both species primarily by their distinctive dorsal fin and the bulbous-to-squarish head.
Lake Erie is a squarish oblong, larger than Ontario, and of a shape rarely found in these early maps.
It is true that these names are not always applied to the same positions on the two maps: “Luisa” is a squarish island on the Maggiolo map, and a triangular one on the other, and in the letter.
There was the "squarish jaw" mentioned by her father to think of.
Four of the squarish cloths are formed of two separately woven breadths of material.
Its wings are narrow, and rounded at the tips; and the only mark to relieve the white ground of the upper side is a squarish blotch at the tip of the fore wing, and even this is either very indistinct or entirely absent in the female.
Shell internal, or absent; mantle restricted to the anterior and middle part of the body; radula with squarish teeth.
No shell; mantle covers the whole surface of the body; radula with squarish teeth.
This is the largest island of the three which constitute the Glorioso Group (Vert Island is very small indeed), and is somewhat squarish in shape, measuring a mile and a half each way.
Caulking is effected by stuffing the seams with bark, over which a lacing is carried, and the squarish holes are finally plugged with some vegetable pulpy matter, of which moss is the chief constituent.
The result of the upper and lower lip being thus acted on is that the mouth assumes a squarish outline.
The action of these opposed muscles, above and below, tends to give to the mouth an oblong, almost squarish outline, as may be seen in the accompanying photographs.
The mouth is widely opened with the lips retracted in a peculiar manner, which causes it to assume a squarish form; the gums or teeth being more or less exposed.
FEMUR The trochanter is a large squarish tuberosity on the lateral surface of the proximal end of the femur.
Large squarish lateral intercalary blotches of darker brown interconnect with the dorsal blotches.
Specimens from the Mexican Plateau and mountain ranges have a distinct light stripe on the second and third scale rows, a dark brown dorsum having squarish black spots, and a row of dark spots on the first row of dorsal scales.
He smeared the lower half of the tusk, leaving only a squarish root.
Ahead of him the funnel reached its narrowest point, a squarish hole still broad enough for five men to pass abreast, that opened into a deepening expanse.
The labrum is narrower than the clypeus, and of squarish shape, the lower angles being rounded.
A little above the articulation of the labrum the width of the clypeus is suddenly reduced, as if a squarish piece had been cut out of each lower corner.
We came close to the foot of several squarish mountains, having perpendicular sides.
Others had a squarish form and were made of palm leaf.
Its leathery, dark green leaves are divided by curving sinuses intosquarish lobes, each ending in one or more bristly tips.
Strolling through the woods he notes among other unfamiliar trees a tall shaft covered with black bark, deeply checked into squarish plates.
Ripe cones are five to ten inches long, with thin, broad, unarmed scales, squarish at the tips.
Another draft of a globe, likewise held to be of about the same date, shows a similar configuration, except that a squarish island stands in it for Florida and adjacent parts of the main.
Thorax campanulate, hemispherical, with six to eight transverse rows of squarish pores, increasing in size downwards.
Peristome with a double coronal of smaller squarish pores and numerous divergent spines; the larger spines are irregularly branched and as long as the diameter of the cephalis.
The three walls of the flat pyramidal thorax are formed in the upper part by squarishnetwork similar to that of the cephalis, in the lower part by a narrow band of the same; between them a large hole.
In there,” he said, pointing to a little canvas door at the side of the squarish tent.
The walls were of dark squarish shapes, and here and there a white oblong, or a blue and a red, and the roof was of mother-of-pearl which gleamed and glistened in the pale golden radiance of the phosphorescent pillars.
It breaks on the trunk into rough, squarish plates, which curl horizontally at the edges.
This is the flowering dogwood, whose grey bark breaks into small squarish plates.
The leaves are coarse, stiff and rough, four to five inches long, tapering from three broad, squarish lobes to a narrow base, and a short leaf stalk.
As she recognised Maryon Rooke's small, squarish handwriting, with its curious contrasts of heavy downstrokes and very light terminals, the colour deepened in her cheeks.
His face was lean, with a squarish jaw, and the very definitely dark brows and lashes contrasted oddly with his English-fair hair and blue-grey eyes.
For her head and neck were now a beautiful green, and she wore two white striped collars, while the back of her feather coat was neatly checked off with little white squarish spots.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "squarish" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.