释义 |
fore1 nounfore2 adjective forefore1 /fɔː $ fɔːr/ noun fore1Origin: 1600-1700 ➔ FORE2 - Automatically, women's bodies are again to the fore.
- Instead, it was a real middle class, of diverse origins, pushed to the fore by changing conditions.
- Muhammad Ali and Pelé are at the fore of the other.
- No new politician has come to the fore, so others vie to fill the vacuum.
- One of them assured us that as he went from fore to aft his shoes were well-nigh buried in blood and brains.
- Passive smoking has come to the fore.
- The 1980s were a decade in which many social issues came to the fore.
- When they returned, thousands awaited them at the airport with Yamamoto to the fore.
► came to the fore Environmental issues came to the fore in the 1980s. ► brought to the fore The case brought to the fore a lot of racial tensions. VERB► bring· But the struggles over the bill bring to the fore much more general questions about how we understand state intervention.· During these years of continual warfare, religious questions were seldom if ever brought to the fore. ► come· Since this simplified technique makes widespread implantation a practical option, cost-benefit issues will come to the fore very quickly.· Now, as Pope fell from grace, McClellan came to the fore again.· This is where the innate artist in you gets the chance to come to the fore.· The 1980s were a decade in which many social issues came to the fore.· At the same time new types of industry, demanding different locational requirements, were coming to the fore.· They have come to the fore at last, increasing their presence by 40 percent in just four years.· Since the ability to draw is not seen as particularly important, this state of affairs has not come to the fore.· Sometimes Bone ThugsN-Harmony member FleshN-Bone comes to the fore with rhymes that could be characterized as urban psalms. ► to the fore- At the same time new types of industry, demanding different locational requirements, were coming to the fore.
- Automatically, women's bodies are again to the fore.
- Being black has always been in my subconscious, but I've tried never to let this come to the fore.
- But it is his streak of self-criticism that should ensure that those gifts come to the fore.
- But the struggles over the bill bring to the fore much more general questions about how we understand state intervention.
- The Government were clearly unaware of the subterranean effort to bring the issue to the fore.
- They are certainly artists of proven worth, but who came to the fore twenty or so years ago.
- Völkisch opinion on these subjects came increasingly to the fore with simplistic solutions that fitted in well with the Junker statusquo.
to the fore to or in a position of importance or influence: Environmental issues came to the fore in the 1980s. The case brought to the fore a lot of racial tensions.fore1 nounfore2 adjective forefore2 adjective [only before noun] technical fore2Origin: 1400-1500 fore ‘before’; ➔ FORE- - The fore part of the carcass provides the picnic shoulder and the Boston butt.
- Three hundred metres from the end of the race, the horse stumbled and fractured its right fore cannon bone.
the fore parts of a ship, plane, or animal are the parts at the front—fore adverb |