Some people who have had unsuccessful treatment for squint may have persistent double vision dating from the time of the treatment. |
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It is usually caused by a squint in one eye, which means the eyes look in different directions. |
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I squint through the glare of the floodlights and struggle to make her out in the window. |
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If the condition is caused by another problem such as a squint or a cataract, surgery may be needed. |
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I squint up at the buff man dressed completely in camouflage and raise an eyebrow. |
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Premature babies are more likely to have early problems with their hearing and sight, such as crossed eyes or a squint. |
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A hot dry wind stirred up small whirlwinds of dust and sand, forcing her to squint. |
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Long-sighted children with a squint need to be monitored carefully to avoid a lazy eye developing. |
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The squint gave a view of the altar to parishioners sitting in the lost north transept. |
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One eye has been practically useless all his life and he has a squint in the other. |
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My daughter was born 31 years ago, like many children, with a divergent squint. |
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If corrective spectacles are not worn this convergent squint may become permanent. |
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After a light roughing up and a long squint at our papers they seemed satisfied that we didn't represent an imminent threat to national security. |
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This revelation seemed all the more miraculous after a squint into the kitchen, which is also extremely small. |
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And a quick squint at his press clippings suggests that the way he earns his living is indeed scandalous. |
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A quick squint in my mirror and I can just make out a Caterham hurtling up behind me. |
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Neither of Hemingway's famous watering holes, visited by hordes of western tourists, are especially wonderful, but are still worth a squint. |
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Camera flashes went off as the scene was investigated, causing her to squint. |
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There is a squint on each side, with square heads on the east and trefoiled heads on the west. |
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The contrail went straight up, bisecting the Sun, forcing the crowd to squint and awkwardly block the Sun to see the contrail. |
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I squint at the scale model of the exhibition which is sitting on the table in between us. |
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You stand on the viewing platform and squint, trying to work out who the guy with the moustache and glasses is. |
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Each time the memory comes up, she would squint her eyes and inhale her breath very deeply. |
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The light made her squint and cower back, like some animal that had dwelled in caves for all time. |
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In the best-known photograph of him, he slouches with one lazy hand on his rifle, sporting a squint that makes him seem none too bright. |
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Some babies are born with a squint or their eyes roll away from each other occasionally. |
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Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's office is sending smoke signals that we all squint to interpret. |
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Grizzled veterans will squint into the sun, look you up and down, and warn that it is definitely not a race for snivellers. |
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Many of the quilts on view could almost be, if you squint, works of geometric abstraction by modern painters. |
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The Times has a new Week on the Web roundup in which they have a squint round the blogs and see if there's anything they like the look of. |
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Her eyes squint and her lips pulse making her laugh even more lovely to hear. |
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Zim's spindly arms and legs, Gaz's angry squint, and Dib's unimaginably large head are all hallmarks of Vasquez's designs. |
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He avoided the fat man's searching squint, kept his eyes fixed stonily on the water. |
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If you load up 10 weblogs at random and squint your eyes at the screen, they all look about the same. |
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Children with lazy eye may squint, look cross-eyed, or tilt their head to see things. |
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The process of exclusion affects not only the squinting eye, but also in part the one that does not squint. |
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Vakhass was suspected of developing a squint, which if left untreated could have led to permanent blindness in one eye. |
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If you squint, you can see the Home Depot behind it gleaming bright and orange in the clear Texas air. |
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You're wondering if there will be enough room even to hold your book at arm's length above shoulder level and squint at the small type on the train. |
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Unable to even squint at the harsh light, her voice was rough and dry. |
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You squint a little at the sickly yellow light of a roadside diner, and rub your fingers against each other, thinking you can feel menu grease on them. |
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You have to squint very hard to make the novel begin to line up with reality. |
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Yekaterina Samutsevich tried not to squint in the bright light of the studio lamps. |
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If I squint I can just make out a bejewelled monk on a throne. |
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With a squint of eye, a curl of lip, a twist of neck, and a body slanguage equally at home in boardrooms and barrooms, she embodies everyone she sees. |
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Light slanted through the canopy of trees that sheltered the abandoned field, causing Qiara to shield her face, and squint her eyes up at the sun. |
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He used a folded towel to lift the pot from the bed of coals in the brazier, his ursine countenance screwed into a squint of concentration as he poured. |
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Grey-skinned office refugees fill Edmonton's Churchill Square, the bright midday sun forcing them to squint as they nibble on their pallid tuna sandwiches. |
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I thought you were laughing at my squint eyes and pronounced limp. |
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That's right, so you test one eye at a time and check what their vision is and also you check at the same time to see whether they have an obvious squint. |
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The precipitating cause of a child with normal, though fragile, binocular function developing a squint has often been considered to be a systemic illness. |
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I thought I might go back when he started school but then he needed me for writing and he had a squint, which meant hospital appointments and treatment. |
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The most important cause of squint is a focusing error in which the lens system of the eye is not strong enough to bring the image to focus on the retina. |
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Common eye problems including short-sightedness and a squint. |
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There is a blocked squint, of uncertain date, in the north wall just as you enter the chancel around which careful searching will reveal some Civil War graffiti. |
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On either side of the chancel arch is a hagioscope or squint, the south one being slightly larger than the north one, to allow for a view of the altar from the side pews. |
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His face relaxes, his eyes squint, his jaw drops, and he suddenly becomes the everyman, a guy with an open-mouthed gape trying to figure out the world. |
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I never thought of him as a particularly great actor, but he had a squint to rival Clint Eastwood's, and, of course, he was also famous for being a gunslinger. |
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They furrow their concerned brows and squint gravely towards the cameras in their field camo but all you hear is hedge and evade and dodge and divert and equivocate. |
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And if Maddie was some back-street kiddie with a squint and snottery nose, her picture wouldn't be everywhere either. |
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After she'd gorn orf I still had my hair-straightening breath, the squint and the bunion. |
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She did not squint not as the sun crept through the Venetian blinds and seemed to ignite her already-luminous smaragdine eyes. |
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If you squint to read the chalkboard from the back of the classroom, a new option may keep you from having a four-eyed future. |
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If every rubberneck who'd turned up for a squint of James Turner Street had left a tenner, we'd be hearing none of this victimhood piffle. |
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Ted, you can black your face, and dye your hair, and squint, and some fine day, sooner or later, somebody'll come along and blab the whole thing. |
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Try an eyepatch, wear dark glasses with one lens, squint or close your dominant eye, and so forth. |
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Lenny gave him the Popeye squint as he rolled off to Frank, the other bodyguard on duty, who was standing on the other side of the stage behind the Epps camp. |
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From common disorders such as squint and lazy eye, to more severe conditions which can lead to lifelong poor sight such as cataracts, glaucoma and eye tumours. |
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