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The phrase "a nice front" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe an appealing or attractive appearance, often in a context where the outward appearance is contrasted with something less favorable underneath.
Example: "The house had a nice front, but the interior needed a lot of work."
Alternatives: "an attractive facade" or "a pleasing exterior".
Exact(11)
This is a super simple app, and provides a nice front end to the website.
It has a stock simple remote control, a nice front temperature readout, and a tilting head.
It has a great rear camera that took excellent shots, a nice front camera, and acceptable video recording performance.
Though you may secretly whine, you put on a nice front and don't say a thing, even when someone takes credit for your work.
Which means: A) only reading books because they think they're supposed to; and B) exclusively reading books that are much too brainy for them just because they've got a nice front cover, then having to spend the duration constantly referring to the little synopsis on the back just to double check what's going on.
Have a nice front door.
Similar(47)
Scott Ritter: Every time we tried to go in and talk about disarming the Russians and how effective arms controls were, The Washington Times had a nice front-page story about how the Soviets were cheating, and they would leak top secret information, etc.
In many ways, this is a wiki with a nice wysiwyg front end (I keep thinking of wikiwyg), plus the ability to set permissions.
You are aiming for a nice, flush front.
She remembered a place of wonderful people, polite and respectful, who kept nice front gardens and swept their sidewalks every morning.
Sure, they want to sell as many copies as possible, but limiting it to one e-book store isn't going to rock their boat too much, and I'm sure Amazon will be paying a nice up-front.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com