Front can be categorized as an adjective, a noun and a verb.
Adjective |
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front - relating to or located in the front; "the front lines"; "the front porch" | ||
Verb |
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front - be oriented in a certain direction, often with respect to another reference point; be opposite to; "The house looks north"; "My backyard look onto the pond"; "The building faces the park" | ||
front - confront bodily; "breast the storm" | ||
Noun |
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front - the side that is seen or that goes first | ||
front - the side that is forward or prominent | ||
front - (meteorology) the atmospheric phenomenon created at the boundary between two different air masses | ||
front - the part of something that is nearest to the normal viewer; "he walked to the front of the stage" | ||
front - the outward appearance of a person; "he put up a bold front" | ||
front - a sphere of activity involving effort; "the Japanese were active last week on the diplomatic front"; "they advertise on many different fronts" | ||
front - a group of people with a common ideology who try together to achieve certain general goals; "he was a charter member of the movement"; "politicians have to respect a mass movement"; "he led the national liberation front" | ||
front - the line along which opposing armies face each other | ||
front - the immediate proximity of someone or something; "she blushed in his presence"; "he sensed the presence of danger"; "he was well behaved in front of company" | ||
front - a person used as a cover for some questionable activity |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | noun | He walked to the front of the stage. | |
2. | noun | He put up a bold front. | |
3. | noun | The Japanese were active last week on the diplomatic front. | |
4. | noun | He led the national liberation front. | |
5. | noun | He was well behaved in front of company. | |
6. | noun | While the Indian army has become rock-solid in the western front, and has developed the capability of withstanding any Pakistani adventure in that sector, it has become highly vulnerable in its eastern sector, where its enemy is not a national army but a multitude of secessionist, terrorist and drug-running militants operating between Southeast Asia and northeastern India through Bangladesh. | |
7. | noun | Put a metal detector in front of every train station in Spain and the terrorists will get the buses. | |
8. | noun | Put guards in front of every concert hall and there will always be a line of people to be checked by the guards and this line will be the target, not to speak of killing the guards themselves. | |
9. | noun | It is a daily occurrence that the same people who finance, arm and dispatch suicide murderers, condemn the act in English in front of western TV cameras, talking to a world audience, which even partly believes them. | |
10. | noun | I remain convinced that if we can just get the facts in front of people they will modulate their approach. | |
11. | noun | we are collecting a premium up front and their total cost is known up front. | |
12. | noun | "They would get in line in front of the Russians. | |
13. | noun | Paul was going out with Heather, but in front of the audience he played the faithful husband's masquerade pretending to suffer for Linda, for the afore mentioned promotional ends. | |
14. | noun | The early days were the days of competition between Paul and his wife and John and his wife and he knew he had to compete with ugly John for the leadership of the band in front of their wives and having Yoko Ono made him aware of his lack of virility and repressed homosexuality, he grew the beard that we see in the "Let it Be" film and started to show pictures of naked women in the same film, doing every effort he could to be seen as a man.... | |
15. | noun | It is easy to note the uneasiness of McCartney when he sings: "I've got a feeling, a feeling I can't hide..." in front of Yoko in the film. | |
16. | adj. | The front lines. | |
17. | adj. | The front porch. | |
18. | adj. | The front-runner for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination faltered Thursday in an international affairs pop quiz posed by Andy Hiller, a political reporter for WHDH-TV in Boston. | |
19. | adj. | Many of us have burrowed beneath the surface to find a spiritual sense of being, an understanding force at least as powerful as those we succumbed to, and many of use wouldn't escape if you opened the front door. | |
20. | adj. | sketch out floor plan, estimate size, draw front view, side view, and 3d orthographic perspective views, | |
21. | adj. | Well one day he said to me You know i don't wear Underwear as he was bent over Working on my Mares Right front hoof.. and I was Like Ummmm okay??? | |
22. | adj. | Well 6 weeks Later when he came back out He was again working on my mares front Foot and I looked Down and Yeah he had Wholes In his pants In the wrong places I bust out Laughing and He was like what??? | |
23. | adj. | We sat in the front dining area, it was very cozy and pleasant. | |
24. | adj. | Bad service starting from the front desk. | |
25. | adj. | The mechanic came to our place and sorted out our cars problems, he explained the problem and was very up front and honest, it was towed to the workshop as the gearbox was not working (he explained it better). | |
26. | adj. | At the front door of his office, I nearly turned around. | |
27. | adj. | I called the front desk and got no answer. | |
28. | adj. | I have never considered this a real problem as I travel without kids and can fend for myself, but when I had to listen to a (non-violent) domestic fight that lasted from 1 AM to 5 AM during my last stay and I found out that the front desk was unmanned during night hours, my choice was to either waste tax payers money by calling for a yet another police dispatch to this hotel, or just get over it. | |
29. | adj. | I chose the later, but approached the front desk about the hotel policy to push over their responsibilities on local authorities, not to mention the good nights sleep i paid for but didnt get. | |
30. | adj. | When we called the front desk about an extremely boisterous crowd in the hall outside our door quite late at night, it seemed to take the hotel staff quite a while to quiet them down. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
He walked to the front of the stage. |
|
He put up a bold front. |
|
The Japanese were active last week on the diplomatic front. |
|
He led the national liberation front. |
|
He was well behaved in front of company. |
|
While the Indian army has become rock-solid in the western front, and has developed the capability of withstanding any Pakistani adventure in that sector, it has become highly vulnerable in its eastern sector, where its enemy is not a national army but a multitude of secessionist, terrorist and drug-running militants operating between Southeast Asia and northeastern India through Bangladesh. |
|
Put a metal detector in front of every train station in Spain and the terrorists will get the buses. |
|
Put guards in front of every concert hall and there will always be a line of people to be checked by the guards and this line will be the target, not to speak of killing the guards themselves. |
|
It is a daily occurrence that the same people who finance, arm and dispatch suicide murderers, condemn the act in English in front of western TV cameras, talking to a world audience, which even partly believes them. |
|
I remain convinced that if we can just get the facts in front of people they will modulate their approach. |
|
we are collecting a premium up front and their total cost is known up front. |
|
"They would get in line in front of the Russians. |
|
Paul was going out with Heather, but in front of the audience he played the faithful husband's masquerade pretending to suffer for Linda, for the afore mentioned promotional ends. |
|
The early days were the days of competition between Paul and his wife and John and his wife and he knew he had to compete with ugly John for the leadership of the band in front of their wives and having Yoko Ono made him aware of his lack of virility and repressed homosexuality, he grew the beard that we see in the "Let it Be" film and started to show pictures of naked women in the same film, doing every effort he could to be seen as a man.... |
|
It is easy to note the uneasiness of McCartney when he sings: "I've got a feeling, a feeling I can't hide..." in front of Yoko in the film. |
|
adj. | |
The front lines. |
|
The front porch. |
|
The front-runner for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination faltered Thursday in an international affairs pop quiz posed by Andy Hiller, a political reporter for WHDH-TV in Boston. |
|
Many of us have burrowed beneath the surface to find a spiritual sense of being, an understanding force at least as powerful as those we succumbed to, and many of use wouldn't escape if you opened the front door. |
|
sketch out floor plan, estimate size, draw front view, side view, and 3d orthographic perspective views, |
|
Well one day he said to me You know i don't wear Underwear as he was bent over Working on my Mares Right front hoof.. and I was Like Ummmm okay??? |
|
Well 6 weeks Later when he came back out He was again working on my mares front Foot and I looked Down and Yeah he had Wholes In his pants In the wrong places I bust out Laughing and He was like what??? |
|
We sat in the front dining area, it was very cozy and pleasant. |
|
Bad service starting from the front desk. |
|
The mechanic came to our place and sorted out our cars problems, he explained the problem and was very up front and honest, it was towed to the workshop as the gearbox was not working (he explained it better). |
|
At the front door of his office, I nearly turned around. |
|
I called the front desk and got no answer. |
|
I have never considered this a real problem as I travel without kids and can fend for myself, but when I had to listen to a (non-violent) domestic fight that lasted from 1 AM to 5 AM during my last stay and I found out that the front desk was unmanned during night hours, my choice was to either waste tax payers money by calling for a yet another police dispatch to this hotel, or just get over it. |
|
I chose the later, but approached the front desk about the hotel policy to push over their responsibilities on local authorities, not to mention the good nights sleep i paid for but didnt get. |
|
When we called the front desk about an extremely boisterous crowd in the hall outside our door quite late at night, it seemed to take the hotel staff quite a while to quiet them down. |
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