forecharge

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From fore- +‎ charge.

Verb

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forecharge (third-person singular simple present forecharges, present participle forecharging, simple past and past participle forecharged)

  1. (transitive, rare) To charge in advance.
    • 1896, Ohio Educational Monthly, volume 45, numbers 1-36, page 98:
      Thus prophetic spake A voice of faith, forecharged with evolution's law.
    • 1982, Review of Socialist Law - Volume 8 - Page 57:
      The rights are listed in article 35," and one or two of them merit some further comment: " person brought to administrative responsibility shall have the right to forecharge vprave znakomit'sia himself with the materials of the case..."
    • 2004, Laura (Riding) Jackson, John Nolan, Alan James Clark, Under the Mind's Watch:
      We are charged with the instinct of the kind of unity-potential I have described, forecharged; and this is not subject to evolutionary development, is something that has been since the creation, and towards which the materiality of the universe has evolved, [...]

Noun

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forecharge (plural forecharges)

  1. A charge made beforehand or in advance.
    • 1796, The Parliamentary Register:
      The city had a plan on paper which, as he had before stated, would cost 900,000l. and tho' comprehending a very extensive system of improvement, would be completed in 24 months, or three years at most, without any forecharge whatever.
    • 1903, John Rankine, The Scots Revised Reports:
      To such a party, a railway suddenly coming through the country to which he has retired to spend his leisure, must, indeed, be a God-send, if he chooses to hold himself out as an amenity witness, and if the forecharges are sustained.
  2. (weaponry) The shot in the forward part of a firearm cartridge.
    • 2014, Arthur J Marder, From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow:
      The fore-charges were individually packed in thin metal containers and loaded in the gun that way;