Frame (pronounced freym)
(1) A (sometimes intricate) border or case for enclosing
a picture, mirror etc.
(2) A rigid structure formed of relatively slender
pieces, joined so as to surround sizable empty spaces or non-structural panels,
and generally used as a major support in building or engineering works,
machinery, furniture etc.
(3) A body, especially a human body, with reference to
its size or build; the physique of someone (often with a modifier (large frame,
slight frame etc).
(4) A structure for admitting or enclosing something
(doors, windows etc); other in the plural and used with a plural verb).
(5) In textile production, a machine or part of a machine
over which yarn is stretched.
(6) In statistics, an enumeration of a population for the
purposes of sampling, especially as the basis of a stratified sample
(7) In telecommunications and data transmission, one
cycle of a regularly recurring number of pulses in a pulse train (frame relay
etc); in networking, an independent chunk of data sent over a network.
(8) A constitution or structure in general; the system.
(9) In beekeeping, one of the sections of which a beehive
is composed, especially one designed to hold a honeycomb
(10) In formal language teaching, a syntactic
construction with a gap in it, used for assigning words to syntactic classes by
seeing which words may “fill the gap”.
(11) In physical film stock, one of the successive
pictures, the concept transferred to digital imagery.
(12) In television, a single traversal by the electron
beam of all the scanning lines on a television screen.
(13) In computing, the information or image on a screen
or monitor at any one time (dated).
(14) In computing (website design), a self-contained
section that functions independently from other parts; by using frames, a
website designer can make some areas of a website remain constant while others
change according to the choices made by the internet user (an individually
scrollable region of a webpage; “collapsible frames” a noted innovation).
(15) In philately, the outer decorated portion of a
stamp's image, often repeated on several issues although the inner picture may
change; the outer circle of a cancellation mark.
(16) In electronics (film, animation, video games), a
division of time on a multimedia timeline.
(17) In bowling, one of the ten divisions of a game; one
of the squares on the scorecard, in which the score for a given frame is
recorded.
(18) In billiards and related games, the wooden triangle
used to set up the balls; the balls when set up by the frame.
(19) In baseball, an inning.
(20) In underworld slang, as “frame-up” or “framed”, to
incriminate (an innocent person) on the basis of fabricated evidence.
(21) In law enforcement slang as “in the frame”, being suspected
by the authorities of having committed a offence.
(22) In publishing, enclosing lines (usually in the form
of a square or rectangle), to set off printed matter in a newspaper, magazine,
or the like; a box.
(23) The structural unit that supports the chassis of an
automobile (X-Frame, ladder-Frame, perimeter-frame, space-frame et al).
(24) In nautical architecture, any of a number of
transverse, rib-like members for supporting and stiffening the shell of each
side of a hull; any of a number of longitudinal members running between web
frames to support and stiffen the shell plating of a metal hull.
(25) In genetics, as “reading frame”, a way of dividing
nucleotide sequences into a set of consecutive triplets.
(26) In mathematics, a complete lattice in which meets
distribute over arbitrary joins.
(27) A machine or part of a machine supported by a
framework, (drawing frame, spinning frame et al).
(28) In printing, the workbench of a compositor,
consisting of a cabinet, cupboards, bins, and drawers, and having flat and
sloping work surfaces on top.
(29) In bookbinding, an ornamental border, similar to a
picture frame, stamped on the front cover of some books.
(30) One’s thoughts, attitude or opinion (usually as “frame
of mind”).
(31) To form or make, as by fitting and uniting parts
together; construct.
(32) To contrive, devise, or compose, as a plan, poem,
piece of legislation etc.
(33) To conceive or imagine, as an idea.
(34) To provide with or put into a frame (painting,
mirror et al).
(35) To give utterance to (typically as “frame an answer”
etc).
(36) To form or seem to form (speech) with the lips, as
if enunciating carefully (often used in speech therapy and elocution training).
(37) To fashion or shape (often a term used in
sculpture).
(38) To shape or adapt to a particular purpose.
(39) To line up visually in a viewfinder or sight.
(40) To direct one's steps (archaic).
(41) To betake oneself; to resort (archaic).
(42) To prepare, attempt, give promise, or manage to do
something (archaic).
Pre 1000: From the Middle English verb framen, fremen or fremmen (to prepare; to construct, build, strengthen, refresh,
perform, execute, profit, avail), from the Old English framiae, fremian, fremman or framian
(to avail, profit), from the Proto-West Germanic frammjan, from the Proto-Germanic framjaną (to perform, promote), from the primitive Indo-European promo- (front, forward) and cognate with
the Low German framen (to commit,
effect), the Danish fremme (to
promote, further, perform), the Swedish främja
(to promote, encourage, foster), the Icelandic fremja (to commit), the Old Frisian framia (to carry out), the Old Norse frama (to further) and the Old High German (gi)framōn (to do); the Middle
English was derived from the verb. Derived
forms such as deframe, misframe, reframe, subframem unframe, beframe, enframe, full-frame,
inframe, outframe, well-framed etc are created as needed. Frame, framer & framableness are nouns, framed
& framing are verbs, framable & frameable are adjectives, frameless is
an adjective and framably is an adverb; the noun plural is frames.
Lindsay Lohan and her lawyer in court, Los Angeles,
December 2011.
In Middle English, the sense of the verb evolved from the
mid-thirteenth century “make ready” to “prepare timber for building” by the
late 1300s and the meaning “compose, devise” was in use by at least the 1540s.
The criminal slang (“framed”; a “frame up” etc) made familiar in popular fiction
all revolved around the idea of corrupt or unscrupulous police fabricating
evidence to “blame an innocent person” seems not to have been in use until the
1920s (although the dubious policing practices would have had a longer history)
and all forms are thought to have been a development of the earlier sense of “plot
in secret”, noted since the turn of the twentieth century, that possibly and
evolution from the meaning “fabricate a story with evil intent”, first attested
early in the sixteenth century. The use
of the noun in the early thirteenth century to mean “profit, benefit,
advancement” developed from the earlier sense of “a structure composed
according to a plan”, developed from the verb and was influenced by Scandinavian
cognates (the Old Norse frami meant “advancement”).
Like its predecessor the 300 SL Gullwing (W198; 1954-1957),
the Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Roadster (W198; 1957—1963) was built on a tubular
space-frame.
The use in engineering “sustaining parts of a structure
fitted together” emerged circa 1400 while the general sense of “an enclosing
border” of any kind came some two centuries later. Surprisingly, the familiar form of a “border
or case for a picture or pane of glass” seems to have come into use only in the
mid-seventeenth century while the use “human body” (ie large frame, slight
frame etc) was in use by the 1590s. Of
bicycles it was used from 1871 and of motor cars by 1900 although the early use
referred often to what would now be understood as sub-frames, structures which
attached to the chassis to support drive-train components, coach-work etc. The meaning “separate picture in a series
from a film” dates from 1960 and was purely descriptive because the individual “frames”
on film-stock resembled framed photographs attached in a continuous roll. The idea of a frame being a “specific state”
was in use in the 1660s, the “particular state” (in the sense of “one’s frame
of mind”) appears in the medical literature in the 1710s. The “frame of reference” was coined for use
in mechanics and graphing in 1897; the figurative sense coming into use by at
least 1924. As an adjective, frame was
in use in architecture & construction by the late eighteenth century. The A-Frame (a type of framework shaped like
the capital letter "A") was an established standard by the 1890s and
a vogue for buildings in this shape was noted in the 1930s.
Faster and smaller: By 1964 the IBM 360 mainframe (left)
had outgrown its cabinet (the original “main frame”) and had colonized whole
rooms. By 2022, the IBM z16 mainframe (right)
was sufficiently compact to return to a cabinet.
In computing, the word “frame” was used in a variety of
ways. The mainframe (central processor
of a computer system) was first described as such in 1964, the construct being main
+ frame and the reference simply was to the fact the core components were
stored in a cabinet which had the largest frame in the room, other, small
cabinets being connected with wires and cables.
Mainframes were the original “big machines” in commercial computing and
still exist; incomparably good for some purposes, less satisfactory for others. Frame Relay also still exists as a standardized
wide-area network (WAN) technology although it’s importance in the industry has
declined since its heyday during the last two decades of the twentieth
century. A packet-switching protocol
used for transmitting data across a network, Frame Relay operates at the data
link layer of the OSI (Open Systems Interconnection) model, which is the second
layer in the seven-layer model. In a
Frame Relay network, data is divided into frames, which are then transmitted
between network devices (such as routers), over a shared communication medium
and it was this latter aspect which accounted for its widespread adoption: unlike
traditional circuit-switching networks (in which a dedicated physical circuit
is established for the duration of a communication session), Frame Relay allows
multiple logical connections to share the same physical resources so for all but
the largest organizations, the potential for cost-saving was considerable. Importantly too, integral to the protocol’s
design was the use of packet switching (which means data is transmitted in
variable-sized packets (ie frames) allowing the optimal use of available
network bandwidth. Frame Relay had the
advantage also of not adding layers of complexity to the network architecture, relying
on the underlying physical layer for error detection and correction rather than
including error recovery mechanisms (a la a protocol like X.25 which operate at
the network layer). All of this made Frame
Relay scalable and adaptable to various network topologies, making it an
attractive “bolt-on” for system administrators and accountants alike. However, while it still exists in some
relatively undemanding niches, the roll-out of the infrastructure required to
support internet traffic mean it has substantially been supplanted by newer
technologies such as Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS).
Pop-art painting of Lindsay Lohan in a mid-eighteenth
century frame by Jean Cherin (circa 1734-1785), Paris, France. This is an intricately carved example of the
transitional Louis XV-style gilt double sweep frame, ornamented with shell
centres, acanthus fan corners, and a top crested with a ribbon-tied leaf &
flower cluster atop a cabochon.