A standard of measurement, being a strip of land one foot wide fronting on the street or waterfront and extending the depth of the lot. Value may be quoted per front foot.
Assuming a right-handed golfer, it is the player's left foot, closest to the target.
The width of a lot at the front, usually given as the first measurement.
A unit of measurement, one foot in length, along the front boundary line of a piece of property which measurement, when assigned a dollar value, is a factor in determining the total value or sale price of a tract.
The foot mounted closest to the nose of the board
The foot mounted closest to the nose. A regular-footer's left foot and a goofy-footer's right foot.
A measurement of the property line which runs along the side of a street.
The foot closest to the front of the snowboard.
A unit of measurement (one foot in length) of the frontage of real property.
A property measurement for purposes of valuation that is measured by the footage on the street line. When the dimensions of a lot are given, such as 600, the first measurement, 200, normally refers to the front footage.
the batsman's foot farthest from his wicket, his non-dominant foot. cf. back foot.
1. The foot closest to the ball. 2. "Front [of the] foot" refers to the outside part of the foot near the shoe laces and just above the little toes.
One foot along the street frontage of a property.