forth

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Definition of forth in English English dictionary

<span class="word-self">Forthspan>
A river in Scotland that flows for about 47 km (29 miles) from The Trossachs through Stirling to the Firth of Forth on the North Sea
<span class="word-self">Forthspan>
A high level (FOuRTH generation) programming language
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
From a particular place or position
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Forward in time, place or degree
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Common misspelling of fourth
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Out into view
<span class="word-self">forthspan>-
Prefix meaning forth, forward, away
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
into notice or view
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
{a} forward, on, out, out of doors
<span class="word-self">Forthspan>
A high level (FOuRTH generation) programing language
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
A language released by Charles Moore in 1975 that was designed for real-time control tasks, as well as business and graphics applications
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
An extensible programming language that uses data stacks and tokens, and has a postfix syntax Programs are written as lists of data items called words, which are combined to create subroutines Its performance/memory ratio makes it popular for certain embedded and real-time applications
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When someone or something is brought forth, they are brought to a place or moved into a position where people can see them. Pilate ordered Jesus to be brought forth = out
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Forward; onward in time, place, or order; in advance from a given point; on to end; as, from that day forth; one, two, three, and so forth
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
If one thing brings forth another, the first thing produces the second. My reflections brought forth no conclusion
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
forward in time or order or degree; "from that time forth"; "from the sixth century onward"
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
out into view; "came forth from the crowd"; "put my ideas forth" forward in time or order or degree; "from that time forth"; "from the sixth century onward
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A way; a passage or ford
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
forth In addition to the uses shown below, forth is also used in the phrasal verbs `put forth' and `set forth'
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Advances the cursor by one item
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
When someone goes forth from a place, they leave it. Go forth into the desert = out
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
forward in time or order or degree; "from that time forth"; "from the sixth century onward
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
from a particular thing or place or position (`forth' is obsolete); "ran away from the lion"; "wanted to get away from there"; "sent the children away to boarding school"; "the teacher waved the children away from the dead animal"; "went off to school"; "they drove off"; "go forth and preach"
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Throughly; from beginning to end
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Beyond a (certain) boundary; away; abroad; out
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
out into view; "came forth from the crowd"; "put my ideas forth"
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
12/97Stack-based threaded interpreted language, 1970
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
back and forth: see back to hold forth: see hold. A river of south-central Scotland flowing about 187 km (116 mi) eastward to the Firth of Forth, a wide inlet of the North Sea. a river in southern central Scotland which flows into the Firth of Forth and the North Sea
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Out, as from a state of concealment, retirement, confinement, nondevelopment, or the like; out into notice or view; as, the plants in spring put forth leaves
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
Forth from; out of
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
forward; further, onward; outward; out
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One of the top three computer languages
<span class="word-self">forthspan>
A language developed in 1970 by Moore Forth is fairly portable and has versions on many different platforms While it is no longer an very popular language, many of its ideas and concepts have been carried into other computer programs In particular, some programs for doing heavy-duty mathematical and engineering work use Forth-like interfaces
forth
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