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Front   /frənt/   Listen
Front

noun
1.
The side that is forward or prominent.  Synonyms: forepart, front end.  Antonym: rear.
2.
The line along which opposing armies face each other.  Synonyms: battlefront, front line.
3.
The outward appearance of a person.
4.
The side that is seen or that goes first.  Antonym: rear.
5.
A person used as a cover for some questionable activity.  Synonyms: figurehead, front man, nominal head, straw man, strawman.
6.
A sphere of activity involving effort.  "They advertise on many different fronts"
7.
(meteorology) the atmospheric phenomenon created at the boundary between two different air masses.
8.
The immediate proximity of someone or something.  Synonym: presence.  "He sensed the presence of danger" , "He was well behaved in front of company"
9.
The part of something that is nearest to the normal viewer.  Antonym: back.
10.
A group of people with a common ideology who try together to achieve certain general goals.  Synonyms: movement, social movement.  "Politicians have to respect a mass movement" , "He led the national liberation front"
adjective
1.
Relating to or located in the front.  "The front porch"  Antonym: back.
verb
(past & past part. fronted; pres. part. fronting)
1.
Be oriented in a certain direction, often with respect to another reference point; be opposite to.  Synonyms: face, look.  "My backyard look onto the pond" , "The building faces the park"  Antonym: back.
2.
Confront bodily.  Synonym: breast.



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"Front" Quotes from Famous Books



... reader, while we turn to the counter-scene of this chapter. The influence of that consternation which had spread throughout the city, was not long in finding its way to the citadel, a massive fort commanding the city from the east. On the plat in front are three brass field-pieces, which a few artillery-men have wheeled out, loaded, and made ready to belch forth that awful signal, which the initiated translate thus:—"Proceed to the massacre! Dip deep your knives in the ...
— Our World, or, The Slaveholders Daughter • F. Colburn Adams

... ceases—and it seldom exceeds two hours—rigidity and hardening sets in, and in all cases precedes putrefaction. It is caused by the coagulation of the muscle plasma. It commences in the muscles of the back of the neck and lower jaw, and then passes into the muscles of the face, front of the neck, chest, upper extremities, and lastly to the ...
— Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology • W. G. Aitchison Robertson

... him and looked up. A little girl was held up by her father to the strong arms reached out from the low front of the balcony. Stephen caught her and swung her up beside him, pointing her up to the door, and shouting to her to go quickly down the fire-escape, even while he reached out his other hand to catch ...
— The Witness • Grace Livingston Hill Lutz

... sane man was deeply surprised and saw that they were mad; nor could he find a single man in his senses. Yet greater was their surprise at him, and as they saw that he did not follow their example, they concluded that he had lost his senses.... So one strikes him in front, another behind; he is dashed to the ground and trampled under foot... at length he flees to his house covered with mud, bruised [88] and half dead and thankful for his escape": The mad town, says ...
— The Troubadours • H.J. Chaytor

... mountain region, and to be as full of antics as a party of schoolfellows out for a day. Songs had been sung, each with a roaring chorus; tricks had been surreptitiously played on the "pass it on" principle—a lad in the rear tilting the helmet of the file in front over his eyes, or giving him a sounding spank on the shoulder with the above admonition, when it was taken with a grin and passed on right away to the foremost rank; while the commissioned officers seemed to be peculiarly blind and deaf so long as their lads marched well, and there was ...
— Fix Bay'nets - The Regiment in the Hills • George Manville Fenn


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