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Learn to pronounce field

/fēld/
noun
  1. an area of open land, especially one planted with crops or pasture, typically bounded by hedges or fences.
    "a wheat field"
    synonyms: meadow, pasture, paddock, green, pen, grassland, pastureland, sward, park, corral, bawn, glebe, lea, mead, greensward
  2. a particular branch of study or sphere of activity or interest.
    "we talked to professionals in various fields"
    synonyms: area, sphere, area of activity, discipline, province, department, domain, sector, line, branch, subject, speciality, specialty, specialization, specialism, métier, forte, scene, bailiwick, pigeon
  3. a space or range within which objects are visible from a particular viewpoint or through a piece of apparatus.
    "the stars drift through this telescope's field of view"
    synonyms: scope, range, sweep, reach, extent, purview, limits, confines, parameters, bounds, horizons
  4. all the participants in a contest or sport.
    "he destroyed the rest of the field with a devastating injection of speed"
    synonyms: competitors, entrants, competition, runners, applicants, candidates, possibles, possibilities, hopefuls
  5. an area on a flag with a single background color.
    "fifty white stars on a blue field"
  6. the region in which a particular condition prevails, especially one in which a force or influence is effective regardless of the presence or absence of a material medium.
  7. a system subject to two binary operations analogous to those for the multiplication and addition of real numbers, and having similar commutative and distributive laws.

verb
  1. play as a fielder.
  2. send out (a team or individual) to play in a game.
    "a high school that traditionally fielded mediocre teams"
    synonyms: put in the team, send out, play, put up
  3. deal with (a difficult question, phone call, etc.).
    "she has fielded five calls from salespeople"
    synonyms: deal with, handle, cope with, answer, reply to, respond to, react to, parry, deflect, turn aside, evade, sidestep, avoid, dodge, answer evasively, fend off, duck

adjective
carried out or working in the natural environment, rather than in a laboratory or office.
"field observations"
synonyms: practical, hands-on, applied, actual, active, experiential, empirical, in the field, nontheoretical, empiric

People also ask
Apr 28, 2024 · a · an area or division of an activity, subject, or profession. the field of microbiology ; b · the sphere of practical operation outside a base ( ...
Field

Field

Mathematics
In mathematics, a field is a set on which addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division are defined and behave as the corresponding operations on rational and real numbers. A field is thus a fundamental algebraic structure which is widely... Wikipedia
field from dictionary.cambridge.org
FIELD meaning: 1. an area of land, used for growing crops or keeping animals, usually surrounded by a fence: 2. a…. Learn more.
The Field Museum connects all of us to the natural world and the human story. Museum open daily, 9am-5pm, last entry 4pm.
field from en.m.wikipedia.org
In mathematics, a field is a set on which addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division are defined and behave as the corresponding operations on ...
Synonyms for FIELD: ground, clearing, tract, parcel, meadow, lot, plot, plat; Antonyms of FIELD: fumble, botch, goof (up), bungle, muff, mess (up), ...
On this page you'll find 199 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to field, such as: farmland, garden, grassland, green, ground, and meadow.
field from www.fieldbrewing.com
Field Brewing is a Westfield, Indiana brewery serving award winning beers and a chef-driven, one-of-a-kind menu using local seasonal ingredients.
noun · an open tract of uncultivated grassland; meadow campestral · a piece of land cleared of trees and undergrowth, usually enclosed with a fence or hedge and ...
field from www.collinsdictionary.com
field in American English · 1. a wide stretch of open land; plain · 2. a piece of cleared land, set off or enclosed, for raising crops or pasturing livestock.
field from en.m.wiktionary.org
(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). (baseball) The outfield.