framing

Related to framing: roof framing

frame (one)

To manipulate a situation so that an innocent person appears to have committed a crime (so that the actual criminal can avoid blame or detection). A: "They're framing me, officer, I swear! I would never go to a seedy place like that!" B: "Oh yeah? Then why did we find your fingerprints there?"
See also: frame

frame (someone) for (something)

To manipulate a situation so that an innocent person appears to have committed a crime (so that the actual criminal can avoid blame or detection). A: "They're framing me for this crime, officer, I swear! I would never go to a seedy place like that!" B: "Oh yeah? Then why did we find your fingerprints there?"
See also: frame

frame (something) in (something)

1. Literally, to place something within a frame. I think you should frame your diploma in this gold one—it suits our décor more.
2. To state something in a particular manner or with a particular focus. He framed his comments on the novel in the context of postcolonialism. If you want Molly to be receptive to your remarks, be sure to frame them in a kind way.
See also: frame

frame out

To construct a building's fundamental structure (also called a "frame"). A noun or pronoun can be used between "frame" and "out." How long do you think it will take the construction crew to frame out the building.
See also: frame, out

frame up

1. To put something, such as a photograph or painting, in a frame. A noun or pronoun can be used between "frame" and "up." I wanted to frame the portrait up in something really classy, like mahogany or walnut. We spent the day framing up posters and artwork to sell at the convention.
2. To construct the frame of a wall or building. A noun or pronoun can be used between "frame" and "up." We framed up the barn on the weekend, and we'll spend the next couple weeks finishing the rest of the work. There's plenty of space to add a new wall down the middle of the room. We'll just need to frame it up and start putting up drywall.
3. To falsely incriminate someone for some crime or wrongdoing, as by planting evidence or giving false testimony. A noun or pronoun can be used between "frame" and "up." He had always maintained that the police had framed him up, but no one believed him. The gang framed up the accountant so he would take the fall for the murder.
See also: frame, up
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

frame something out

to build the basic wood structure of a building, such as a house. The carpenters, working fast, framed the whole house out in a day. They framed out the house.
See also: frame, out
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • frame (one)
  • frame (someone) for (something)
  • frameup
  • frame-up
  • swear down
  • clean hands, have
  • have clean hands
  • swear
  • swear (that) black is white
  • swear black is white
References in periodicals archive
In the context of media framing processes, frame endurance can be understood as the repeated, continuous deployment of a specific frame in the mass media over time.
There are at least two different--not necessarily competing--outcomes that self-framing may produce: the marginal utilities of self-framing may disappear as time goes by, and there may be a psychological framing effect.
TRENDS While the final framed item is ideally a marriage between the requirements of the customer and the expertise of the framing consultant, new approaches to framing with innovative materials and styles are constantly being tested.
Rather, that framing function is served by "the covers of a book or the lines enclosing a poem in a journal ...
PMA Marketing Research completed a national consumer survey providing an in-depth look at the custom framing market.
Structural insulated panels (SIPS) are the most popular form of construction after stick framing. They are composed of foam insulation sandwiched between a "skin" of oriented strand board (OSB).
Numerous resources are available for those who would like to extend their reading on the war in Iraq to sources that question the dominant framing of events.
Walker, 43, was an interior designer and had owned a custom framing and art gallery business that had folded a few years earlier.
(1996) have argued that in the coming years, the framing of the debate will be of increasing importance to the policies that are adopted.
Framing Public Life: Perspectives on Media and Our Understanding of the Social World.
* Large, flat pieces of corrugated cardboard (can obtain throw-away pieces from photographers, framing stores, etc.)
In what seems to be an afterthought, however, they indirectly acknowledge that framing is not in itself pejorative, since even quilters need frames, and quilters too bring to their work a "completeness" (161).
FC-2 defines the Framing, Flow Control, and Service Class.
Merchandising: In this arts and crafts shop, the three aisles of tabletop frames are located in the back of the store, surrounded by framed art and materials for framing. White metal shelves present a large assortment of frames in several styles, materials and colors, but there is no rhyme or reason to the display.
In the autobiographies the imagery associated with such acts of framing is, perhaps understandably, more ambivalent.