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
The group was created as part of a towing reform law passed last year after the news organizations showed how towing companies were seeking the DMV’s permission to sell some cars after as little as 15 days, one of the shortest time frames in the country.—Dave Altimari, ProPublica, 7 Jan. 2026 Taking over a 19th-century townhouse with ornamental window frames and swirling wrought-iron balcony consoles, âme doesn’t strike you as a hotel at first.—Chris Schalkx, Condé Nast Traveler, 7 Jan. 2026
Verb
In a Christmas Eve memo to CBS staff, Weiss framed the move as the right one.—Alex Weprin, HollywoodReporter, 1 Jan. 2026 Matt Murphy, a venture capitalist at Menlo Ventures and an early Anthropic investor, frames it differently.—Mackenzie Sigalos, CNBC, 1 Jan. 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
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