例句 |
fieldnoun a small area of usually open landa field that is the frequent site of neighborhood softball games clearing, ground, lot, parcel, plat, plot, tract common(s), croft(chiefly British)grass, green, greensward, lawnglade, grassland, heath, heathland, lea(or ley), meadow, moor, pasture, pastureland a region of activity, knowledge, or influencethe first woman to enter the field of medicine area, arena, bailiwick, barony, business, circle, demesne, department, discipline, domain, element, fief, fiefdom, firmament, front, game, kingdom, line, precinct, province, realm, specialty, sphere, terrain, walk frontierstudy, subjectterritory, turfoccupation, profession, pursuit, racket, vocationambit, amplitude, breadth, compass, confine, dimension(s), extent, ken, reach, scope, sweep, widthsubfield, subspecialty a part or portion having no fixed boundariesif you set your camera lens to small aperture, the field of sharp focus will be quite large area, demesne, region, zone corner, sectionlocale, locality, location, locus, place, point, position, site, space, spot a place where a battle takes placethe field where two mighty armies met and changed the course of history a place from which aircraft operate that usually has paved runways and a terminalWorsham Field in Corpus Christi used to be home to a sizable crop dusting operation aerodrome(chiefly British), airdrome, airfield, airport air base, air park, helipad, heliport, jetportairstrip, landing field, landing strip, runwaylaunchpad, pad a wide space or areathe cemetery's field of crosses for the war's fallen seemed to stretch to infinity breadth, distance, expanse, expansion, extent, length, plain, reach, sheet, spread, stretch, waste domain, sphere, territorycompass, range, scope, sweepgamut, scale, spectrumdepth, emptiness, voidextension, latitude, spanamplitude, immensity, magnitude active fighting during the course of a warin the classroom the general had been a brilliant theoretician, but in the field he proved to be a wholly incompetent tactician fieldverbto deal with (something) usually skillfully or efficientlygave the waitress a large tip because she kept smiling as she fielded their many requests address, contend (with), cope (with), grapple (with), hack, handle, manage, maneuver, manipulate, negotiate, play, swing, take, treat engineer, finesse, jockeybring off, carry off, carry out, get off, pullcommand, direct, guide, steercontrol, micromanage, regulate, runreact (to), respond (to) come to grips with, have a grip on botch, bungle, foozle, fumble, goof (up), louse up, mess (up), mishandle, muff, scamp before the 12th century |