Full-faith-and-credit
noun
1.
the obligation under Article IV of the U.S. Constitution for each state to recognize the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state.
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- Full-fashioned
[foo l-fash-uh nd] /ˈfʊlˈfæʃ ənd/ adjective 1. knitted to conform to the shape of a body part, as of the foot or leg: full-fashioned hosiery.
- Full-figured
[foo l-fig-yerd; British foo l-fig-erd] /ˈfʊlˌfɪg yərd; British ˈfʊlˌfɪg ərd/ adjective 1. (of a woman) having an amply proportioned or heavy body. adjective designed for larger women, esp. clothes
- Full fig
noun phrase Full official or ceremonial attire; full dress •Chiefly British: Arrivals from a Swissair flight: two lushly draped, satiny ladies, a squire in noisy tweeds, a bishop in full fig [1838+; origin uncertain; perhaps fr full figure, used of fashion illustrations showing the full front of the wearer]
- Full-fledged
[foo l-flejd] /ˈfʊlˈflɛdʒd/ adjective 1. of full rank or standing: a full-fledged professor. 2. fully developed. adjective 1. See fully fledged adj. 1883 in figurative sense; see full (adj.) + fledge.
- Full forward
noun 1. (Australian rules football, Gaelic football) an attacking player who plays in the centre of the forward line