forecharge

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From fore- +‎ charge.

Verb

forecharge (third-person singular simple present forecharges, present participle forecharging, simple past and past participle forecharged)

  1. (transitive, rare) To charge in advance.
    • 1896, Ohio Educational Monthly, volume 45, numbers 1-36, page 98:
      Thus prophetic spake A voice of faith, forecharged with evolution's law.
    • 1982, Review of Socialist Law - Volume 8 - Page 57:
      The rights are listed in article 35," and one or two of them merit some further comment: " person brought to administrative responsibility shall have the right to forecharge vprave znakomit'sia himself with the materials of the case..."
    • 2004, Laura (Riding) Jackson, John Nolan, Alan James Clark, Under the Mind's Watch:
      We are charged with the instinct of the kind of unity-potential I have described, forecharged; and this is not subject to evolutionary development, is something that has been since the creation, and towards which the materiality of the universe has evolved,

Noun

forecharge (plural forecharges)

  1. A charge made beforehand or in advance.
    • 1796, The Parliamentary Register:
      The city had a plan on paper which, as he had before stated, would cost 900,000l. and tho' comprehending a very extensive system of improvement, would be completed in 24 months, or three years at most, without any forecharge whatever.
    • 1903, John Rankine, The Scots Revised Reports:
      To such a party, a railway suddenly coming through the country to which he has retired to spend his leisure, must, indeed, be a God-send, if he chooses to hold himself out as an amenity witness, and if the forecharges are sustained.
  2. (weaponry) The shot in the forward part of a firearm cartridge.
    • 2014, Arthur J Marder, From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow:
      The fore-charges were individually packed in thin metal containers and loaded in the gun that way;