場 は英語で
field
英語の定義
場 | |
1. n. (from 1275) a place | |
2. n. (from 1701) a situation, the circumstances of a particular place and time | |
(synonyms, ja, 状況, tr1=jōkyō, q1=circumstances more generally) | |
3. n. (from 1825) an act, a section of a play | |
4. n. (from 1888) (physics) a field | |
5. n. (from 1893) a trading floor, as in a market or exchange | |
(synonyms, ja, 立会場, tr1=tachiaijō) | |
6. counter. (from 1825) an act, a section of a play | |
7. n. (date uncertain) a flattened area used for festivals or ceremonies | |
8. n. (from late 1300s) a place where events are held | |
9. suffix. (from early 700s) place, arena, course | |
10. suffix. (date uncertain) while, period |
その他の翻訳と定義
field | ||
1. 名詞. 野原。 | ||
2. 名詞. 畑。 | ||
3. 名詞. 競技場、フィールド。 | ||
4. 名詞. 戦場。 | ||
5. 名詞. 分野、フィールド。 | ||
6. 名詞. (物理学)場。界。 | ||
7. 動詞. (他動詞)~に出場させる。 | ||
8. 動詞. (他動詞)~の守備につく。 | ||
9. 動詞. (他動詞)~をさばく。 | ||
She will field questions immediately after her presentation. | ||
彼女は、プレゼンテーション後すぐに質問を捌く。 | ||
10. 動詞. (自動詞)守備につく。 |
field | ||
1. n. A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | ||
There are several species of wild flowers growing in this field. | ||
2. n. (usually plural) The open country near or belonging to a town or city. | ||
3. n. # An airfield, airport or air base; especially, one with unpaved runways. | ||
4. n. A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | ||
There were some cows grazing in a field. | ||
A crop circle was made in a corn field. | ||
5. n. (geology) A region containing a particular mineral. | ||
oil field; gold field | ||
6. n. A place where competitive matches are carried out. | ||
7. n. A place where a battle is fought; a battlefield. | ||
8. n. An area reserved for playing a game or race with one’s physical force. | ||
soccer field | ||
Substitutes are only allowed onto the field after their boots are checked. | ||
9. n. # (baseball, obsolete) The team in a match that throws the ball and tries to catch it when it is hit by the other team (the bat). | ||
10. n. # (baseball) The outfield. | ||
11. n. A place where competitive matches are carried out with figures, playing field, in a boardgame or in a computer game. | ||
12. n. A competitive situation, circumstances in which one faces conflicting moves of rivals. | ||
13. n. (metonymically) All of the competitors in any outdoor contest or trial, or all except the favourites in the betting. | ||
This racehorse is the strongest in a weak field. | ||
14. n. Any of various figurative meanings, regularly dead metaphors. | ||
15. n. (physics) A physical phenomenon (such as force, potential or fluid velocity) that pervades a region; a mathematical model of such a phenomenon that ass | ||
magnetic field; gravitational field; scalar field | ||
16. n. (Any of certain structures serving cognition.) | ||
17. n. # The extent of a given perception. | ||
# field of view | ||
18. n. # A realm of practical, direct or natural operation, contrasted with an office, classroom, or laboratory. | ||
# The design needs to be field-tested before we commit to manufacture. | ||
# Field work traditionally distinguishes true archaeologists from armchair archaeologists. | ||
# He needs some time in the field before his judgment can be trusted. | ||
19. n. # A domain of study, knowledge or practice. | ||
# He was an expert in the field of Chinese history. | ||
20. n. # An unrestricted or favourable opportunity for action, operation, or achievement. | ||
21. n. # (algebra) A commutative ring satisfying the field axioms. | ||
# The set of rational numbers,\mathbbQ, is the prototypical field. | ||
22. n. A physical or virtual location for the input of information in the form of symbols. | ||
23. n. # (heraldry) The background of the shield. | ||
24. n. # (vexillology) The background of the flag. | ||
25. n. # A concrete section in a form which is supposed to be filled with data. | ||
# The form has fields for each element of the customer's home address and ship-to address. | ||
26. n. # A component of a database in which a single unit of information is stored. | ||
27. n. ## (computing) An area of memory or storage reserved for a particular value, subject to virtual access controls. | ||
28. v. (transitive, sports) To intercept or catch (a ball) and play it. | ||
29. v. (baseball, softball, cricket, and other batting sports) To be the team catching and throwing the ball, as opposed to hitting it. | ||
The blue team are fielding first, while the reds are batting. | ||
30. v. (transitive, sports) To place a team in (a game). | ||
The away team fielded two new players and the second-choice goalkeeper. | ||
31. v. To answer; to address. | ||
She will field questions immediately after her presentation. | ||
32. v. To defeat. | ||
They fielded a fearsome army. | ||
33. v. To execute research (in the field). | ||
He fielded the marketing survey about the upcoming product. | ||
34. v. (transitive, military) To deploy in the field. |
place | ||
1. 名詞. 空間 | ||
2. 名詞. 場所、位置 | ||
3. 名詞. 地位、身分、職 | ||
4. 動詞. おく |
place | ||
1. n. (physical) An area; somewhere within an area. | ||
2. n. An open space, particularly a city square, market square, or courtyard. | ||
3. n. A group of houses. | ||
They live at Westminster Place. | ||
4. n. An inhabited area: a village, town, or city. | ||
5. n. Any area of the earth: a region. | ||
He is going back to his native place on vacation. | ||
6. n. The area one occupies, particularly somewhere to sit. | ||
We asked the restaurant to give us a table with three places. | ||
7. n. The area where one lives: one's home, formerly(chiefly) country estates and farms. | ||
Do you want to come over to my place later? | ||
8. n. An area of the skin. | ||
9. n. (euphemism) An area to urinate and defecate: an outhouse or lavatory. | ||
10. n. (obsolete) An area to fight: a battlefield or the contested ground in a battle. | ||
11. n. A location or position in space. | ||
12. n. A particular location in a book or document, particularly the current location of a reader. | ||
13. n. (obsolete) A passage or extract from a book or document. | ||
14. n. (obsolete) A topic. | ||
15. n. A frame of mind. | ||
I'm in a strange place at the moment. | ||
16. n. (chess) A chess position; a square of the chessboard. | ||
17. n. (social) A responsibility or position in an organization. | ||
18. n. A role or purpose; a station. | ||
It is really not my place to say what is right and wrong in this case. | ||
19. n. The position of a contestant in a competition. | ||
We thought we would win but only ended up in fourth place. | ||
20. n. (horse-racing) The position of first, second, or third at the finish, especially the second position. | ||
to win a bet on a horse for place | ||
21. n. The position as a member of a sports team. | ||
He lost his place in the national team. | ||
22. n. (obsolete) A fortified position: a fortress, citadel, or walled town. | ||
23. n. Numerically, the column counting a certain quantity. | ||
three decimal places; the hundreds place | ||
24. n. Ordinal relation; position in the order of proceeding. | ||
That's what I said in the first place! | ||
25. n. Reception; effect; implying the making room for. | ||
26. v. To put (an object or person) in a specific location. | ||
He placed the glass on the table. | ||
27. v. (intransitive) To earn a given spot in a competition. | ||
The Cowboys placed third in the league. | ||
28. v. (intransitive, racing) To finish second, especially of horses or dogs. | ||
In the third race: Aces Up won, paying eight dollars; Blarney Stone placed, paying three dollars; and Cinnamon showed, paying five dollars. | ||
29. v. To remember where and when (an object or person) has been previously encountered. | ||
I've seen him before, but I can't quite place where. | ||
30. v. (transitive, in the passive) To achieve (a certain position, often followed by an ordinal) as in a horse race. | ||
Run Ragged was placed fourth in the race. | ||
31. v. To sing (a note) with the correct pitch. | ||
32. v. To arrange for or to make (a bet). | ||
I placed ten dollars on the Lakers beating the Bulls. | ||
33. v. To recruit or match an appropriate person for a job. | ||
They phoned hoping to place her in the management team. | ||
34. v. (sports) To place-kick (a goal). |
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