Foretop vs Foretopman - What's the difference?
foretop | foretopman |
(obsolete) The top of the head; the top of the forehead.
(obsolete) The lock of hair which grows on top of the forehead; the corresponding part of a wig.
(obsolete) In the phrase, to take time'' (or ''occasion'' or ''opportunity'') ''by the foretop , meaning "to boldly seize an opportunity".
(obsolete) A fop; one who sports a foretop.
An erect tuft of hair.
The forelock of a horse.
(nautical) A platform at the top of the foremast, supported by the trestle trees.
The front seat at the top of a horse-drawn vehicle.
(nautical) A sailor who controls the masts in the foretop.
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=March 8, author=Alessandra Stanley, title=The Vanishing Sidekick, work=New York Times
, passage=WHEN Jimmy Fallon showed up on NBC ’s “Late Night” last week without a sidekick, it looked like yet another sign that the Ed McMahon era is over; so many talk show hosts work solo that the second-banana position seems almost as obsolete as the foretopman or the Linotype operator. }}
In nautical|lang=en terms the difference between foretop and foretopman
is that foretop is (nautical) a platform at the top of the foremast, supported by the trestle trees while foretopman is (nautical) a sailor who controls the masts in the foretop.As nouns the difference between foretop and foretopman
is that foretop is (obsolete) the top of the head; the top of the forehead while foretopman is (nautical) a sailor who controls the masts in the foretop.foretop
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(en noun)Derived terms
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*References
*foretopman
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(foretopmen)citation
