Need another word that means the same as “frontier”? Find 18 synonyms and 30 related words for “frontier” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Frontier” are: border, boundary, partition, borderline, dividing line, bounding line, demarcation line, limit, end, edge, side, farthest point, boundary line, bound, partition line, end point, cut-off point, termination
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “frontier” as a noun can have the following definitions:
border | A district near the border between two areas. A refugee camp on the border. |
borderline | A boundary separating two countries or areas. The borderline between ritual and custom. |
bound | A line determining the limits of an area. I went up the steps in two effortless bounds. |
boundary | A limit of something abstract, especially a subject or sphere of activity. The river marks the boundary between the two regions. |
boundary line | The greatest possible degree of something. |
bounding line | The greatest possible degree of something. |
cut-off point | A contact in the distributor; as the rotor turns its projecting arm contacts them and current flows to the spark plugs. |
demarcation line | A telephone connection. |
dividing line | A ridge of land that separates two adjacent river systems. |
edge | A slight competitive advantage. The cliff edge. |
end | The point in time at which something ends. Both ends wrote at the same time. |
end point | A piece of cloth that is left over after the rest has been used or sold. |
farthest point | The object of an activity. |
limit | Final or latest limiting point. It is growing rapidly with no limitation in sight. |
partition | The act of dividing or partitioning separation by the creation of a boundary that divides or keeps apart. The cafe was divided up by glass partitions. |
partition line | The part of a hard disk that is dedicated to a particular operating system or application and accessed as a single unit. |
side | Spin given to the cue ball in snooker and billiards by hitting it on one side. The hypotenuse of a right triangle is always the longest side. |
termination | An act of dismissing someone from employment. A good result and a happy termination. |
bastion | A natural rock formation resembling a man made bastion. Cricket s last bastion of discrimination. |
border | Provide with a border or edge. The walls were bordered with carved scrolls and cornices. |
borough | Each of five divisions of New York City. |
boundary | The greatest possible degree of something. The river marks the boundary between the two regions. |
castle | Make a special move (no more than once in a game by each player) in which the king is transferred from its original square two squares along the back rank towards a rook on its corner square which is then transferred to the square passed over by the king. Both of the players castled on the queenside. |
country | The people who live in a nation or country. The country s increasingly precarious economic position. |
defensible | Justifiable by argument. A fort with a defensible yard at its feet. |
delimit | Be opposite to; of angles and sides, in geometry. Agreements delimiting fishing zones. |
demarcate | Separate or distinguish from. Art was being demarcated from the more objective science. |
fort | Enclose by or as if by a fortification. The city was guarded by a ring of forts. |
fortress | A person or thing not susceptible to outside influence or disturbance. He had proved himself to be a fortress of moral rectitude. |
garrison | Station troops in a fort or garrison. Air reconnaissance showed the Germans had not garrisoned the island. |
geographic | Determined by geography. The north and south geographic poles. |
geographical | Determined by geography. The geographical distribution of plants. |
near | Come near to approach. The near right hand end window of the caravan. |
nearby | Not far away; close. His four sisters live nearby. |
outskirts | Outlying areas (as of a city or town. They lived on the outskirts of Houston. |
periphery | The outside boundary or surface of something. A shift in power from the centre to the periphery. |
precinct | The police station situated in a precinct. A pedestrian precinct. |
protector | The title of the head of state in England during the later period of the Commonwealth between 1653 and 1659, first Oliver Cromwell (1653–8), then his son Richard (1658–9). A man who became her protector adviser and friend. |
remote | A remote control device. A remote contingency. |
seacoast | The shore of a sea or ocean. |
settler | A person who moves with a group of others to live in a new country or area. The early European settlers in America were often fleeing from religious persecution. |
skirt | Informal terms for a (young) woman. He did not go through the city but skirted it. |
slum | Spend time at a lower social level than one’s own through curiosity or for charitable purposes. The area was fast becoming a slum for the destitute. |
sortie | An operational flight by a single aircraft (as in a military operation. This latest book is the author s first sortie into non fiction. |
stockade | Surround with a stockade in order to fortify. They fortified themselves strongly and stockaded the city. |
tenable | Able to be maintained or defended against attack or objection. A scholarship of 200 per annum tenable for three years. |
town | The chief city or town of a region. They drive through town on their way to work. |
ward | The grooves in the bit of a key that correspond to the wards in a lock. I saw them keeping ward at one of those huge gates. |
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