front-foot

See also: front foot

English

Etymology

From the phrase on the front foot.

Adjective

front-foot (comparative more front-foot, superlative most front-foot)

  1. On the front foot; Acting so as to take control of a situation.
    • 2015, Christopher Johns, Mindful Leadership: A Guide for the Health Care Professions:
      Front foot thinking is about 'being in place', taking the initiative and being proactive, rather than being caught on the back foot, reactive, defensive and uncertain.
    • 2021 May 29, Phil McNulty, “Manchester City 0-1 Chelsea”, in BBC Sport:
      Chelsea needed to be defensively perfect but this was no smash-and-grab result. It was a front-foot display to take the initiative away from City in the first half.
  2. Based on the width of the front of a property.
    • 1927, Journal of the New England Water Works Association, page 442:
      There are, of course, excellent examples of extensions to existing systems being carried out on the front-foot assessment plan, but this procedure is distinctly different from the programs herein outlined as applied to newly created systems of large size.
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