Fore vs Forme - What's the difference?
fore | forme |
(obsolete) Former; occurring earlier (in some order); previous.
Forward; situated towards the front (of something).
* 1969 , Vladimir Nabokov, Ada or Ardor , Penguin 2011, p. 23:
(golf) An exclamation yelled to inform players a ball is moving in their direction.
The front; the forward part of something; the foreground.
* 2002 , Mark Bevir, The Logic of the History of Ideas :
In the part that precedes or goes first; opposed to aft, after, back, behind, etc.
(obsolete) Formerly; previously; afore.
* Shakespeare
(nautical) In or towards the bows of a ship.
(fare)
(rare, or, archaic)
(historical, printing) One side of a sheet, comprising four quarto pages or two folio pages.
* 1978 , David A. Bloestein, Introduction'', , David A. Bloestein (editor), ''Parasitaster: Or, The Fawn ,
* 1994 , Jay L. Halio, Introduction'', Jay L. Halio (editor), , ''The First Quarto of King Lear ,
* 2011 , Eugene Giddens, How to Read a Shakespearean Play Text ,
As nouns the difference between fore and forme
is that fore is the front; the forward part of something; the foreground while forme is an alternative spelling of lang=en.As an adjective fore
is former; occurring earlier (in some order); previous.As an interjection fore
is an exclamation yelled to inform players a ball is moving in their direction.As an adverb fore
is in the part that precedes or goes first; opposed to aft, after, back, behind, etc.As a verb fore
is simple past of fare.As a proper noun Fore
is a people of Papua New Guinea.fore
English
Etymology 1
A development of the prefix .Adjective
- the fore part of the day
- the fore end of a wagon
- Crystal vases with crimson roses and golden-brown asters were set here and there in the fore part of the shop [...].
Antonyms
* (order) latter * (location) aftInterjection
(en interjection)Noun
(-)- The fore was painted white.
- People face a dilemma whenever they bring to the fore an understanding that appears inadequate in the light of the other beliefs they bring to bear on it.
Adverb
(-)- The eyes, fore duteous, now converted are.
Etymology 2
*Verb
(head)Anagrams
* * * English irregular simple past forms ----forme
English
Noun
(en noun)page 47,
- Both these formes , with running titles intact, were retained to print sheet D of Q2.
page 21,
- Q2 was printed in twenty-two formes .
page 41,
- In casting off, the printing house would judge the length of a manuscript to determine both how many sheets would be needed, and what the divisions were between one forme' and another. (A '''forme''' is one side of a sheet: four quarto pages or two folio pages.) Because '''formes''' do not have many consecutive pages, estimates would be further broken down by page. If a quarto ' forme includes a putative page one, for instance, that side of the sheet would also include pages four, five, and eight.