Synonym: chief, first, foremost, forward, front, head, primary. Antonym: aft, back, hind. Similar words: ore, wore, whore, bore, lore, tore, more, sore. Meaning: [fɔr /fɔː] n. front part of a vessel or aircraft. adj. situated at or toward the bow of a vessel. adv. near or toward the bow of a ship or cockpit of a plane.
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31. I kept my head down and the heavy bag well to the fore as a protective shield.
32. Grand but not too grand, and wearing all its medals and trophies to the fore.
33. The 1980s were a decade in which many social issues came to the fore.
34. Seeing Margaret begin to pull herself up, Maura's natural kindness came to the fore.
35. This is the time when your grasp on logic comes to the fore.
36. No new politician has come to the fore, so others vie to fill the vacuum.
37. The Labour Party comes to the fore when the distribution of resources comes to the top of the agenda.
38. The main deck forward was ten inches thick and further reinforcement was fitted both fore and aft.
39. Instead, it was a real middle class, of diverse origins, pushed to the fore by changing conditions.
40. Fore those who aren't colour-shy, Fired Earth has more than 100 shades in its Haute Provence range of clay tiles.
41. Since this simplified technique makes widespread implantation a practical option, cost-benefit issues will come to the fore very quickly.
42. The Government were clearly unaware of the subterranean effort to bring the issue to the fore.
43. Now, as Pope fell from grace, McClellan came to the fore again.
44. Once again it was the Club Secretary Eddie who came to the fore maintaining his good form and romping home a clear winner.
45. Several factors had intervened to bring the building surveyor to the fore.
46. At present the opportunities they provide for cost cutting are more to the fore.
47. But it is his streak of self-criticism that should ensure that those gifts come to the fore.
48. The fore part of the carcass provides the picnic shoulder and the Boston butt.
49. Success in computation relating to time intervals is highly dependent on a number of factors and there fore is variable.
50. They have come to the fore at last, increasing their presence by 40 percent in just four years.
51. As previously noted, long-term forecasts differ from short-term fore casts primarily in the level of detail required.
52. They used to have big chains right round, fore and aft to keep them together.
53. Analysts are divided over whether Fore and the other expensively acquired businesses will ever make a decent return for shareholders.
54. Bees and wasps hitch their fore and hind wings together with hooks to make, in effect, a single surface.
55. Botulism is another fatal disease which has come to the fore in recent years.
56. Occasions arise when there is no time for niceties(sentencedict.com/fore.html), and Schubert was usually to the fore at such times.
57. A large heap of peanuts belonged to her at this moment, and her natural liveliness was well to the fore.
58. This line represents the fore and aft axis of your aircraft, the fuselage.
59. It is perhaps not surprising that such an interpretation should come to the fore in the implementation of normalisation.
60. Oldknow the man of romantic sensibility came to the fore.