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ALL meanings of front

front
F f
  • noun front the part or side of anything, as a building, that seems to look out or to be directed forward: He sat in the front of the restaurant. 1
  • noun front any side or face, as of a building. 1
  • noun front a façade, considered with respect to its architectural treatment or material: a cast-iron front. 1
  • noun front a property line along a street or the like: a fifty-foot front. 1
  • noun front a place or position directly before anything: We decided to plant trees in the front. 1
  • noun front a position of leadership in a particular endeavor or field: She rose to the front of her profession. 1
  • noun front Military. the foremost line or part of an army. a line of battle. the place where combat operations are carried on. 1
  • noun front an area of activity, conflict, or competition: news from the business front. 1
  • noun front land facing a road, river, etc. 1
  • noun front British. a promenade along a seashore. 1
  • noun front Informal. a distinguished person listed as an official of an organization, for the sake of prestige, and who is usually inactive. 1
  • noun front a person or thing that serves as a cover or disguise for some other activity, especially one of a secret, disreputable, or illegal nature; a blind: The store was a front for foreign agents. 1
  • noun front outward impression of rank, position, or wealth. 1
  • noun front bearing or demeanor in confronting anything: a calm front. 1
  • noun front haughtiness; self-importance: That clerk has the most outrageous front. 1
  • noun front the forehead, or the entire face: the statue's gracefully chiseled front. 1
  • noun front a coalition or movement to achieve a particular end, usually political: the people's front. 1
  • noun front something attached or worn at the breast, as a shirt front or a dickey: to spill gravy down one's front. 1
  • noun front Meteorology. an interface or zone of transition between two dissimilar air masses. 1
  • noun front Theater. the auditorium. the business offices of a theater. the front of the stage; downstage. 1
  • adjective front of or relating to the front. 1
  • adjective front situated in or at the front: front seats. 1
  • adjective front Phonetics. (of a speech sound) articulated with the tongue blade relatively far forward in the mouth, as the sounds of lay. 1
  • verb with object front to have the front toward; face: Our house fronts the lake. 1
  • verb with object front to meet face to face; confront. 1
  • verb with object front to face in opposition, hostility, or defiance. 1
  • verb with object front to furnish or supply a front to: to front a building with sandstone. 1
  • verb with object front to serve as a front to: A long, sloping lawn fronted their house. 1
  • verb with object front Informal. to provide an introduction to; introduce: a recorded message that is fronted with a singing commercial. 1
  • verb with object front to lead (a jazz or dance band). 1
  • verb with object front Phonetics. to articulate (a speech sound) at a position farther front in the mouth. 1
  • verb with object front Linguistics. to move (a constituent) to the beginning of a clause or sentence. 1
  • verb without object front to have or turn the front in some specified direction: Our house fronts on the lake. 1
  • verb without object front to serve as a cover or disguise for another activity, especially something of a disreputable or illegal nature: The shop fronts for a narcotics ring. 1
  • idioms front in front, in a forward place or position: Sit down, you in front! 1
  • idioms front in front of, ahead of: to walk in front of a moving crowd. outside the entrance of: to wait in front of a house. in the presence of: to behave badly in front of company. 1
  • idioms front out front, outside the entrance: He's waiting out front. ahead of competitors: This advertising campaign ought to put our business way out front. Theater. in the audience or auditorium. Informal. candidly; frankly: Say what you mean out front. 1
  • idioms front up front, Informal. in advance; before anything else: You'll have to make a payment of $5,000 up front. frank; open; direct: I want you to be up front with me. 1
  • noun front The side or part of an object that presents itself to view or that is normally seen or used first; the most forward part of something. 1
  • noun front forward part of sth 1
  • adjective front part: forward, fore 1
  • noun front ahead of others 1
  • noun front beginning 1
  • noun front false appearance, façade 1
  • noun front military: combat area 1
  • noun front field of activity 1
  • noun front of a shirt 1
  • noun front property line abutting a street 1
  • noun front disguise, cover 1
  • noun front political movement 1
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