[
UK
/fˈeɪsd/
]
[ US /ˈfeɪst/ ]
[ US /ˈfeɪst/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
having a face or facing especially of a specified kind or number; often used in combination
a neatly faced terrace
How To Use faced In A Sentence
- The experience was a little like being seated next to a cheerful, open-faced fellow on a long airplane flight who begins talking to you - and then never, ever, ever stops, not even when he has his Salisbury steak dinner in his mouth.
- The auctioneer's podium faced a wall hung with six sets of mounted antlers each side of a large red deer's head. Times, Sunday Times
- The case has offered an insight into travails he faced running the family business and securing a successor. Times, Sunday Times
- Close to the mangroves a big hawksbill turtle surfaced then lay motionless in the sunshine, no doubt sunbathing.
- I hit the water and surfaced, looking back to see Scott pointing west.
- When faced with serious disasters, countries often declare a formal state of emergency.
- Faced with difficulties from recalcitrant landowners and political opponents, the scheme eventually necessitated financial rescue by the king himself.
- a neatly faced terrace
- Two rows behind the bench sits a sweet-faced junior college girl who just announced her intention to play for Oregon next year.
- Another argument that rates will rise is that inflation, long thought dead, has recently resurfaced.