face-to-face in the PONS Dictionary

face-to-face Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Works must be created through a face-to-face encounter with the subject.
en.wikipedia.org
The publication and its annual forum promote written and face-to-face interdisciplinary discussion around issues in theology and the study of religion.
en.wikipedia.org
He nearly gets crushed by falling ice and then comes face-to-face with three ugly, menacing monster faces in the snowdrifts.
en.wikipedia.org
These microphones are usually positioned face-to-face and are used to determine a pressure gradient.
en.wikipedia.org
When he comes face-to-face with the away team, he is nervous, suspicious, and distraught.
en.wikipedia.org
Ideally we'd like interviews to take place face-to-face, so that contributors have the opportunity to meet with the people we're covering.
en.wikipedia.org
Interviewers with laptops conduct face-to-face interviews, and the result is information about social wellbeing including housing, health, paid work, social connectedness, and human rights.
en.wikipedia.org
The three communities comprised three experimental communication strategies: a media-only campaign, a media campaign supplemented with face-to-face communication, and a no-intervention control group.
en.wikipedia.org
The best arena to do that is the municipality the city, town, and village where we have an opportunity to create a face-to-face democracy.
en.wikipedia.org
What about all the conversations and commiserations that happen on other media, on our phones, or of course, face-to-face, with no electronic record?
www.theatlantic.com

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