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- Dictionarynounframe (noun) · frames (plural noun)
- (frames)a metal or plastic structure holding the lenses of a pair of glasses.
- a case or border enclosing a mirror or picture.
- the rigid supporting structure of an object such as a vehicle, building, or piece of furniture:"the wooden frame of the huge bed" · "an old bicycle frame"
- a boxlike structure of glass or plastic in which seeds or young plants are grown.
- archaicthe universe, or part of it, regarded as an embracing structure:"this goodly frame the Earth"
- a basic structure that underlies or supports a system, concept, or text:"the establishment of conditions provides a frame for interpretation"
- technicalshort for frame of reference
- the genre or form of a literary text determining its expected style and content:"my poems look as though they have a classical frame"
- an enclosing section of narrative, especially one which foregrounds or comments on the primary narrative of a text:"a frame narrator reports the narrative spoken by an inner narrator"
- archaicthe structure, constitution, or nature of someone or something:"we have in our inward frame various affections"
- a single complete picture in a series forming a movie, television, or video film:"video footage slowed down to 20 frames a second"
- a single picture in a comic strip.
- computinga graphic panel in a display window, especially in a web browser, which encloses a self-contained section of data and permits multiple independent document viewing.
- linguisticsa structural environment within which a class of words or other linguistic units can be correctly used. For example I — him is a frame for a large class of transitive verbs.
- another term for rack
- a round of play in bowling.
- US ENGLISHinformalan inning in a baseball game:"he closed out the game by pitching two hitless frames"
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHshort for frame-up
verbframe (verb) · frames (third person present) · framed (past tense) · framed (past participle) · framing (present participle)- US ENGLISHerect the framework of a building.
OriginOld English framian ‘be useful’, of Germanic origin and related to from. The general sense in Middle English, ‘make ready for use’, probably led to frame; it also gave rise to the specific meaning ‘prepare timber for use in building’, later ‘make the wooden parts (framework) of a building’, hence the noun sense ‘structure’ (late Middle English). 93 Synonyms & Antonyms for FRAME | Thesaurus.com
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