0 to public attention or into a noticeable position: --
1 (especially on ships) towards or in the front --
2 at or towards the front: --
3 a noticeable or public position: --
The presidential campaign has brought the issue of big political contributions to the fore.
4 in or toward the front part of something, esp. a boat --
Women and empire were yet to come to the fore.
The war brought financiers and industrialists to the fore for various reasons.
At times, the vested interests of professional groups have come to the fore.
However, the measured pressure distributions show some fore-and-aft asymmetry and the maximum thickness is slightly downwind of the half-chord point.
In this figure the angle is measured from the fore stagnation point.
Syntactic constructions are not hyphenated or written as one word, just as they are not fore-stressed.
The researchers interact with their ' fore-meanings ' or assumptions.
A significant positive correlation between the length of fore femur and the number of scales was detected in all treatments (table 6).