We will need to see the entire sentence.
I can't think of when I would want to use this phrase.
I'm sorry, Alvib.
You must think this means something that it does not. I don't know what you mean by this.
Do you mean "at international conferences"?
Do you mean "within the framework established by the organizers of conferences"?
Do you mean something else?
It's meaningless to me, too.
Yes, there's certainly no problem with the phrase of "in frames of", and it's not meaningless in the right context.Interestingly, I found the phrase "within the frames of" in COCA. And google found a plenty of pages with "in frames of"/"in the frames of" [...]
Yes, there's certainly no problem with the phrase of "in frames of", and it's not meaningless in the right context.
"I have some Van Gogh prints in frames of gold"; "The skittles are set in frames of ten."
But it's not used (as far as I know) in English for your context.
Hmmm. There are three citations: one for 'within the frames of reference, one for 'within the frames of meaning', and the third for within the frames of his photographs'. This is hardly convincing evidence of the acceptability or commonness of 'within the frames of'.'Interestingly, I found the phrase "within the frames of" in COCA.