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Definition of Common front
1. Noun. A movement in which several individuals or groups with different interests join together. "The unions presented a common front at the bargaining table"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Common Front
Literary usage of Common front
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Biennial report by North Dakota Geological Survey (1906)
"Soft-mud Soft-mud Soft-mud and dry-press PRODUCTS Common Brick Common, front and
fire brick. Special fire clay shapes Common Brick Common and front brick; ..."
2. Digest of the Law of Restrictions on the Use of Real Property by Claude Perrin Berry (1915)
"They would remain two houses in spite of the common front door, and in spite of any
... The common staircase, common front door, and internal communication, ..."
3. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society by London Mathematical Society (1905)
"The field of each of the waves near their common front diminishes only through
the kind of • JJ Thomson (lac. tit.) gives the roots in case n = 3. ..."
4. Welfare Reform: Improving State Automated Systems Requires Coordinated edited by Cynthia M. Fagnoni (2000)
"With a common front end, data can be entered once and updated across all systems.
common front ends are often built to assist caseworkers and are used with ..."
5. Russia, To-day and To-morrow by Pavel Nikolaevich Mili︠u︡kov (1922)
"The choice was free for a time between Kornilov and Lenin. Unfortunately, no
common front proved to be possible from Kerensky to ..."
6. The Structure of Lasting Peace: An Inquiry Into the Motives of War and Peace by Horace Meyer Kallen (1918)
"... there could not be a common front; lacking a common front, there could not be
final victory. So our soldiers paid and our workers paid for the illusion ..."
7. Ecumenical Missionary Conference, New York, 1900 (1900)
"It is not a far cry from a conference like this to a common front on the mission
field. Still less is it a far cry from united activity ..."
8. Capital (1888)
"The EEC countries have agreed to present a common front in their negotiations
with the rest of the world, particularly in negotiations with Japan and the ..."