I. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
bring
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But the struggles over the bill bring to the fore much more general questions about how we understand state intervention.
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During these years of continual warfare, religious questions were seldom if ever brought to the fore .
come
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Since this simplified technique makes widespread implantation a practical option, cost-benefit issues will come to the fore very quickly.
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Now, as Pope fell from grace, McClellan came to the fore again.
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This is where the innate artist in you gets the chance to come to the fore .
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The 1980s were a decade in which many social issues came to the fore .
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At the same time new types of industry, demanding different locational requirements, were coming to the fore .
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They have come to the fore at last, increasing their presence by 40 percent in just four years.
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Since the ability to draw is not seen as particularly important, this state of affairs has not come to the fore .
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Sometimes Bone ThugsN-Harmony member FleshN-Bone comes to the fore with rhymes that could be characterized as urban psalms.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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Automatically, women's bodies are again to the fore .
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Instead, it was a real middle class, of diverse origins, pushed to the fore by changing conditions.
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Muhammad Ali and Pelé are at the fore of the other.
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No new politician has come to the fore , so others vie to fill the vacuum.
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One of them assured us that as he went from fore to aft his shoes were well-nigh buried in blood and brains.
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Passive smoking has come to the fore .
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The 1980s were a decade in which many social issues came to the fore .
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When they returned, thousands awaited them at the airport with Yamamoto to the fore .
II. adjective
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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The fore part of the carcass provides the picnic shoulder and the Boston butt.
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Three hundred metres from the end of the race, the horse stumbled and fractured its right fore cannon bone.