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  1. Dictionary
    field
    [fēld]
    noun
    field (noun) · fields (plural noun) · the field (noun)
    1. an area of open land, especially one planted with crops or pasture, typically bounded by hedges or fences:
      "a wheat field" · "a field of corn"
      Image of field
      Image of field
      Image of field
      Image of field
      • a piece of land used for a particular purpose, especially an area marked out for a game or sport:
        "a football field"
        Similar:
        sports field
        recreation ground
      • cricket
        defensive play or the defensive positions collectively:
        "he is fast in the field and on the bases"
      • a large area of land or water completely covered in a particular substance, especially snow or ice:
        "an ice field"
      • an area rich in a natural product, typically oil or gas:
        "an oil field"
      • (the field)
        a place where a subject of scientific study or of artistic representation can be observed in its natural location or context.
      • an area on which a battle is fought:
        "a field of battle"
      • archaic
        a battle:
        "many a bloody field was to be fought"
    2. a particular branch of study or sphere of activity or interest:
      "we talked to professionals in various fields"
      • computing
        a part of a record, representing an item of data.
      • linguistics
        psychology
        a general area of meaning within which individual words make particular distinctions.
    3. a space or range within which objects are visible from a particular viewpoint or through a piece of apparatus. See also field of vision.
      "the stars drift through this telescope's field of view"
    4. (the field)
      all the participants in a contest or sport:
      "he destroyed the rest of the field with a devastating injection of speed"
    5. an area on a flag with a single background color:
      "fifty white stars on a blue field"
      • heraldry
        the surface of an escutcheon or of one of its divisions.
    6. physics
      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.
      • the force exerted or potentially exerted in a field:
        "the variation in the strength of the field"
    7. mathematics
      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
    field (verb) · fields (third person present) · fielded (past tense) · fielded (past participle) · fielding (present participle)
    1. cricket
      baseball
      play as a fielder.
    2. send out (a team or individual) to play in a game:
      "a high school that traditionally fielded mediocre teams"
      Similar:
      put in the team
      • (of a political party) nominate (a candidate) to run in an election:
        "a radical political party that is beginning to field candidates in local elections"
      • deploy (an army):
        "no one had the power to field an army of any consequence"
    3. deal with (a difficult question, phone call, etc.):
      "she has fielded five calls from salespeople"
    adjective
    field (adjective)
    1. carried out or working in the natural environment, rather than in a laboratory or office:
      "field observations"
      Opposite:
      • (of military equipment) light and mobile for use on campaign:
        "field artillery"
        Opposite:
      • used in names of animals or plants found in the open country, rather than among buildings or as cultivated varieties:
        "field ant"
      • denoting a game played outdoors on a marked field.
    Origin
    Old English feld (also denoting a large tract of open country; compare with veld), of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch veld and German Feld.
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