[
US
/ˈfeɪstuˈfeɪs/
]
ADVERB
-
within each other's presence
she met the president face-to-face -
directly facing each other
the two photographs lay face-to-face on the table
they sat opposite at the table
lived all their lives in houses face-to-face across the street
ADJECTIVE
-
in each other's presence
a face-to-face encounter
How To Use face-to-face In A Sentence
- It bemuses me that I need a face-to-face situation in order to be able to construct my own argument without feeling overwhelmed.
- Welcome the hopeless odds of meeting highly trained soldiers face-to-face. CONFESSIONAL
- The Confucius Business School set up at various countries shall recruit students locally, and the recruited local business students will be given face-to-face couching by teachers sent over.
- When face-to-face, he would just call him baba (father).
- The non-verbal cues given during a face-to-face meeting will not come across in an electronic survey.
- We've spoken on the phone but never face-to-face.
- In her experiments she either stood face-to-face with them - protected by a plastic visor - or she used photos.
- Face-to-Face" incorporates the power of many women in a collaborative co-creational dynamic by a direct link for customers with these women survivors of war through Women for Women International (www. womenforwomen.org). Nancy Northrop: Face-To-Face: How Women Can Make A Difference
- Instead, they all insisted that course newsgroups should be used only as a supplement to face-to-face discussion.
- He suggests that we all should focus more on face-to-face interaction. Times, Sunday Times