English » Polish

I . face [feɪs] N

1. face (part of head):

face
twarz f

2. face (expression):

face
mina f

3. face (presence):

face
oblicze nt
to tell sth to sb's face

4. face (front side):

face
przód m
face of building
front m
face of mountain
face of clock, watch
tarcza f

5. face fig (aspect):

face
strona f

II . face [feɪs] VB trans

1. face (turn towards):

to face each other

Phrases:

to face the music inf

face-to-face ADV

1. face-to-face (personally):

2. face-to-face (meet unexpectedly):

3. face-to-face (experience):

about-face N AM

about-face → about-turn

See also about-turn

about-turn N fig

face amount N ECON

1. face amount (face value):

face amount

2. face amount (in insurance):

face amount

face cream N no pl

face cream

face powder N no pl

face value N

rock face N

volte-face [ˌvɒltˈfɑ:s, Am ˌvɑ:ltˈfɑ:s] N usu no pl liter

face up to VB intr

to face up to sth

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
He pointed to the oil palm trees and in a deadpan face, said the trees were his girlfriends.
en.wikipedia.org
These are foreshortened compared to related species so its face was probably short and stubby.
en.wikipedia.org
Rather than face a protracted legal case with an uncertain outcome, the board voted to accept women as members in 1990.
en.wikipedia.org
The una corda and damper pedals are at the left and right of this space, and face straight in, like the table piano pedals.
en.wikipedia.org
They face allegations of smuggling after eight mobile phones, top-up cards and receipts were found in a bag of sugar.
www.mirror.co.uk
The shares were redeemed at the full face value (no discount).
en.wikipedia.org
There is evidence that this is true (see inequity aversion) and it is intuitive, at least for small face-to-face groups of people.
en.wikipedia.org
They thereupon confiscate his canoe and take off down river, leaving him to face the vengeance of the approaching humans alone.
en.wikipedia.org
In addition, they think a great deal about the afterlife, which makes sense considering that they constantly face death in the line of duty.
en.wikipedia.org
I went to school every day covered in bruises, boils, sties and face welts, you name it.
www.theatlantic.com

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