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There are no sharply defined edges.
In 1867, the great astronomy populariser, Richard A. Proctor, published a map of Mars that gave hard, defined edges to features that had, so far, been softly rendered.
But the unruly life she invests them with, not to mention her deliciously skewed sense of humour, stops them attaining the clearly defined edges of the purely instructional.
An ulcer has a depressed floor or crater surrounded by sharply defined edges that are sometimes elevated above the level of the adjoining surface.
Gilbert Kalish painted Messiaen's bursts of solo piano writing in bright hues and with sharply defined edges, an approach matched by the woodwinds, brasses and percussion of the Stony Brook Contemporary Chamber Players, led by Eduardo Leandro.
Also, it is probable that the ice particles were really tiny, leading to the sharply defined edges of both the sun and the red ring around it that you observed.
Similar(14)
A trench was defined as an elongated and continuous excavation, with well-defined edges and at least two times longer than its width.
A pit was defined as a single excavation, circular in appearance, with well-defined edges, and where the ratio between the length and the width of the excavation did not exceed two.
His gnocchi emerge from the cooking water glistening, with well-defined edges, eager to absorb a light sauce.
The boundaries of carotid plaques were manifested by VET with well-defined edges.
They have abrupt and well-defined edges, irregular surfaces, and a lobate appearance; they may be 3 to 6 m (10 to 20 feet) high.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com