Noun
the frame of a house
I need new frames for my glasses. Verb
It was the first state to frame a written constitution.
She framed her questions carefully.
He took the time to frame a thoughtful reply.
She claims that she was framed.
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Noun
Langford had the equalizer in the bottom frame, coaxing a walk, which preceded an Emma Rodwell single.—Mike Waters, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 25 Mar. 2026 Workers check vehicle frames on the production line for electric vehicle maker Zeekr at its factory on May 29, 2025 in Ningbo, China.—Sam Meredith, CNBC, 25 Mar. 2026
Verb
Defending the gambling expansion, Rouse has typically framed legalizing new gambling machines as an important source of income for small businesses.—Robert Schmad, The Washington Examiner, 22 Mar. 2026 Iran has launched missiles toward the joint US-UK military installation on Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, in what Iranian officials framed as a demonstration of longer-range strike capabilities previously downplayed.—Bojan Stojkovski, Interesting Engineering, 22 Mar. 2026 See All Example Sentences for frame
Word History
Etymology
Verb, Noun, and Adjective
Middle English, to benefit, construct, from Old English framian to benefit, make progress; akin to Old Norse fram forward, Old English fram from