fore
pronunciation
How to pronounce fore in British English: UK [fɔː(r)]
How to pronounce fore in American English: US [fɔːr]
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- Noun:
- front part of a vessel or aircraft
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- Adjective:
- situated at or toward the bow of a vessel
- located anteriorly
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- Adverb:
- near or toward the bow of a ship or cockpit of a plane
Word Origin
- fore (adv., prep.)
- Old English fore (prep.) "before, in front of, in presence of; because of, for the sake of; earlier in time; instead of;" as an adverb, "before, previously, formerly, once," from Proto-Germanic *fura "before" (cognates: Old Saxon fora, Old Frisian fara, Old High German fora, German vor, Danish for, Old Norse fyrr, Gothic faiura "for"), from PIE *prae-, extended form of root *per- (1) "forward, through" (see per). Now displaced by before. In nautical use, "toward the bows of the ship." Merged from 13c. with the abbreviated forms of afore and before and thus formerly often written 'fore. As a noun, "the front," from 1630s. The warning cry in golf is first recorded 1878, probably a contraction of before.
- fore (adj.)
- mid-15c., "forward;" late 15c., "former, earlier;" early 16c., "situated at the front;" all senses apparently from fore- compounds, which frequently were written as two words in Middle English.
Example
- 1. Please contact us fore more information !
- 2. If things were different , other names would have come to the fore .
- 3. But the developments underscore fundamental questions that came to the fore in the financial crisis : what do the people who create and sell investments owe to those who buy the investments ?
- 4. Sailors employed in chipping fore decks .
- 5. In any event , politics soon returned to the fore .