:10
:09
:08
:07
:06
:05
:04
:03
:02
:01
| a gadget; dingus; thingumbob. |
| a chattering or flighty, light-headed person. |
| frame (freɪm) | |
| —n | |
| 1. | an open structure that gives shape and support to something, such as the transverse stiffening ribs of a ship's hull or an aircraft's fuselage or the skeletal beams and uprights of a building |
| 2. | an enclosing case or border into which something is fitted: the frame of a picture |
| 3. | the system around which something is built up: the frame of government |
| 4. | the structure of the human body |
| 5. | a condition; state (esp in the phrase frame of mind) |
| 6. | a. one of a series of individual exposures on a strip of film used in making motion pictures |
| b. an individual exposure on a film used in still photography | |
| c. an individual picture in a comic strip | |
| 7. | a. a television picture scanned by one or more electron beams at a particular frequency |
| b. the area of the picture so formed | |
| 8. | billiards, snooker |
| a. the wooden triangle used to set up the balls | |
| b. the balls when set up | |
| c. US and Canadian equivalent (for senses 8a, 8b): rack a single game finished when all the balls have been potted | |
| 9. | computing (on a website) a self-contained section that functions independently from other parts; by using frames, a website designer can make some areas of a website remain constant while others change according to the choices made by the internet user |
| 10. | short for cold frame |
| 11. | one of the sections of which a beehive is composed, esp one designed to hold a honeycomb |
| 12. | a machine or part of a machine over which yarn is stretched in the production of textiles |
| 13. | (in language teaching, etc) a syntactic construction with a gap in it, used for assigning words to syntactic classes by seeing which words may fill the gap |
| 14. | statistics an enumeration of a population for the purposes of sampling, esp as the basis of a stratified sample |
| 15. | (in telecommunications, computers, etc) one cycle of a regularly recurring number of pulses in a pulse train |
| 16. | slang another word for frame-up |
| 17. | obsolete shape; form |
| 18. | in the frame likely to be awarded or to achieve: I'm in the frame for the top job |
| —vb | |
| 19. | to construct by fitting parts together |
| 20. | to draw up the plans or basic details for; outline: to frame a policy |
| 21. | to compose, contrive, or conceive: to frame a reply |
| 22. | to provide, support, or enclose with a frame: to frame a picture |
| 23. | to form (words) with the lips, esp silently |
| 24. | slang to conspire to incriminate (someone) on a false charge |
| 25. | slang to contrive the dishonest outcome of (a contest, match, etc); rig |
| 26. | dialect (Yorkshire), (Northeast English) (intr) |
| a. (usually imperative or dependent imperative) to make an effort | |
| b. to have ability | |
| [Old English framiae to avail; related to Old Frisian framia to carry out, Old Norse frama] | |
| 'framable | |
| —adj | |
| 'frameable | |
| —adj | |
| 'frameless | |
| —adj | |
| 'framer | |
| —n | |
frame (frām)
n.
Something composed of parts fitted and joined together.
frame definition
|