Form

  • 121form — A model or skeleton of an instrument to be used in a judicial proceeding or legal transaction, containing the principal necessary matters, the proper technical terms or phrases and whatever else is necessary to make it formally correct, arranged… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 122form — A model or skeleton of an instrument to be used in a judicial proceeding or legal transaction, containing the principal necessary matters, the proper technical terms or phrases and whatever else is necessary to make it formally correct, arranged… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 123form — [13] Form comes via Old French forme from Latin forma ‘shape, contour’, a word whose origins have never been satisfactorily explained. Its semantic similarity to Greek morphé ‘form, shape’ (source of English morphology [19]) is striking, and has… …

    Word origins

  • 124form up — intransitive verb : to assume or participate in an orderly arrangement the waiting crowd formed up in a long line the planes formed up over the airfield * * * ˌform ˈup [intransitive] [present tense I/you/we/they …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 125-form — adjective combining form Etymology: French & Latin; French forme, from Latin formis, from forma in the form or shape of ; resembling < filiform > …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 126-form — a combining form meaning having the form of : cruciform. [ < L formis] * * * …

    Universalium

  • 127Form — Formf 1.Leistungsfähigkeit;sportlichesKönnen.VondermenschlichenGestaltübertragenaufdenäußerlichsichtbarenAusdruckdesTuns,desHandelns.Um1900ausgleichbedengl»form«entlehnt. 2.FormseinesLebens=inseinembisherigenLebenjemalserreichtehöchsteLeistungsfäh&#8230; …

    Wörterbuch der deutschen Umgangssprache

  • 128form — • gestalt, form, figur, yttre • design, formgivning, form, komposition, styling • formulär, blankett, förlaga …

    Svensk synonymlexikon