force-feed |
to force (one) to eat, learn, or accept something either against the will or at an uncomfortably fast pace. |
forceful |
having power, force, or effectiveness. |
forceless |
combined form of force. |
forcemeat |
finely chopped or ground meat, fish, or poultry, often mixed with other foods that act as binders or seasoning, and used as a stuffing. |
force of attraction |
a force between two bodies, molecules, particles, or the like, that attracts each to the other. |
force of nature |
in physics, any one of the fundamental forces that occur in nature, including electromagnetic force, weak nuclear force, strong nuclear force, and gravitational force. [3 definitions] |
force-out |
a baseball play in which a runner in forced out at the next base following the hitting of a fair ball by a teammate. |
forceps |
a pair of tongs or pincers used in medical procedures, as to grasp and extract tissue or foreign bodies during surgery. |
force pump |
a pump with a valveless plunger, used to raise the level of a liquid or convey it through a pipe by the application of pressure. |
for certain |
unquestionably; positively. |
forcible |
achieved through force or violence. [3 definitions] |
ford |
a shallow stretch in a river or other body of water that can be crossed without a boat or raft. [2 definitions] |
fordable |
combined form of ford. |
'fore |
contracted form of "before". |
fore1 |
at, near, or toward the front. [4 definitions] |
fore2 |
in golf, used as a warning to alert those who may be in the path of a golf ball that is about to be driven. |
fore- |
before. [2 definitions] |
fore-and-aft |
located along or parallel to a line from the bow to the stern of a ship or boat; lengthwise. [2 definitions] |
forearm1 |
the lower arm in humans, between the elbow and wrist. [2 definitions] |
forearm2 |
to arm or prepare beforehand. |
forebear |
an ancestor or forefather. |