faced
IPA: fˈeɪst
adjective
- (in combination) Having a specified type or number of faces.
- Having the outer surface dressed, with the front, as of a dress, covered ornamentally with another material.
- (slang) drunk
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Examples of "faced" in Sentences
- The dilemma faced is that there is a single unaccounted for military item: an "offog".
- McKinley again faced Democrat William Jennings Bryan in the presidential election of 1900.
- Prior to its official launch, the title faced some serious controversy regarding its PC version.
- One problem the electric cars faced is they were designed by auto engineers, not computer/electrical engineers.
- When the label faced up where the batter could read it, the ball hit where the wood grain is tightest and, therefore, where the bat is strongest.
- Sudanese UN female employee Lubna Hussein faced threats of imprisonment and flogging for the “sin” of wearing trousers in Khartoum - and her saga is far from over.
- On Wednesday, Spain faced its first general strike in eight years after the government slashed spending to ease its budget deficit that has ballooned to 11% of GDP.
- The most recent phenomena I have faced is recieving a distance education pack for one of my courses with about four pages of work by the lecturer, referring to a text book.
- Founded at Aberystwyth University in 1988, the label faced indifference and often hostility from the Welsh establishment for deviating from the conservative fare found at eisteddfodau (national festivals) broadcast by S4C (the Welsh-language channel).
- The moves come as Obama is about to enter the second half of his term faced with the challenge of getting his agenda through a House of Representatives now controlled by the Republican Party and a Senate where his Democratic Party has a narrower majority.