frontish
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]frontish (comparative more frontish, superlative most frontish)
- (informal, rare) Somewhat to the front.
- 1962, Clancy Sigal, Going Away: A Report, A Memoir, Boston, M.A.: Houghton Mifflin Company, page 238:
- We were sitting, more or less peaceably, in the frontish rows of the darkened theater when the cops broke in, pouring in from all exits.
- 1963, Ken Kelman, “Smith Myth”, in P. Adams Sitney, editor, Film Culture Reader (Praeger Film Books), New York, N.Y., Washington, D.C.: Praeger Publishers, published 1970, page 284:
- When the first show was over, a clique, a claque of six or so, back on the west side applauded. And I, all alone, east of the aisle up frontish, applauded, amid the numb and blind.
- 2018, Delilah S. Dawson, Kevin Hearne, Kill the Farm Boy, New York, N.Y.: Del Rey, →ISBN, page 267:
- Garden path or not, she'd found a narrow porch and a door that looked frontish enough.
- (phonology) Of a sound: produced near the front of the mouth.
- 2006, Thomas E[dward] Payne, Exploring Language Structure: A Student's Guide, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 141:
- This rule makes sense because palatal sounds are frontish themselves, and assimilation rules are the most common type of morphophonemic rule (see chapter 3).
- (Trinidad and Tobago) Assertive, pushy.
- 2015, Sabrina Ramnanan, Nothing Like Love, Toronto, Ont.: Anchor Canada, published 2017, →ISBN, page 223:
- Gloria snorted. "Sangita is one frontish woman."
References
[edit]- “frontish, adj.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.