because people associate it with cold weather but they are wrong
No, it is not. It is a noun, a language term for speech that is deliberately ambiguous, confusing, or evasive. Sometimes the term is extended to euphemisms (or "spin").
front
Stationary front.
Depending on where you are, you'd probably be more likely to get snow associated with a warm from ("warm" is a relative term). Though most snow occurs in mid-latitude cyclones, which usually have both a warm and cold front (sometimes occluded and stationary as well). But really, it isn't usually the front itself that is causing the snow.
A female donkey is called a jenny (sometimes a jennet, which is confusing because this term is also used to describe a hinny). Donkey breeders refer to females as mares, males as stallions. It only gets confusing when both horses and donkeys are being described.
The pressure is always lowest at the frontal boundary, whether warm or cold. ______________________________________________________________________ The pressure would decrease since warm fronts are found at the front of low pressure systems. Pressure can also decrease at the warm and cold frontal boundaries just like the previous answer states, but can only increase when the cold front passes.
The term is "stationary front" although it may still be moving, just not on a continuing line toward or away from the center of one pressure system (i.e. cold front, warm front).
Anterior is the medical term meaning front or in front of.
Ventral or anterior.
"Negligible" is a confusing term; this depends on a specific situation.
What term describes how hot or cold an object is?
Anteroposterior is the directional term used to describe front to back.