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
Bench unit’s zone Jamal Murray almost always starts the second quarter and plays the bulk of the non-Jokic minutes in that frame, but his rotation was different in Memphis.—Bennett Durando, Denver Post, 25 Nov. 2025 The Gophers led by 15 at the half and as many as 19 in the third frame.—Jace Frederick, Twin Cities, 25 Nov. 2025
Verb
Frogposting, then, pits the intractably byzantine, soulless and cutthroat nature of the contemporary economy in a simple binary against what the posters envision as the green, healthy, naturalness of the Earth—framed as a joke, the base unit of online commentary.—Hazlitt, 3 Dec. 2025 President Vladimir Putin previously framed LGBTQ protections as harmful.—Aamir Khollam, Interesting Engineering, 3 Dec. 2025 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
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