Dictionary
Frank
noun
Free postage, a right exercised by governments (usually with definite article).
Exact(8)
Dry, a little impudent and just terrifically frank, musician James Blake thinks he knows what will happen when his second album is released tomorrow: the majority of us will download it for free.
The latest overhaul of Twitter's safety features comes after a leaked memo from the company's chief executive, Dick Costolo, laid out in frank language its failures to get on top of harassment on the site.
In an unusually frank speech to an audience of leading rail industry figures, Carne said: "While our passenger safety performance is the best in Europe, about 600 railway workers a year – employees and contractors – are injured to the extent that they cannot return to work the next day.
But if Cameron has his occasional moment of impatience with Obama, he has lost all remaining illusions about Vladimir Putin, a man that at one point he believed he had developed a frank and valuable dialogue.
James' first non-fiction book, Being A Boy, tackled puberty, sex and relationships in a frank and funny fashion.
This is clever, as it makes Huntsman look important and the subject of much attention which – to be frank – has not been remotely true.
But #talkpay did not just play host to frank salary confessionals.
It really was a toss-up about what was more noteworthy: that Abbott gave that overly frank account of his private scheduling to a room full of people; or that people would leak it, knowing that's a highly damaging concept to have floating out there.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com