field

field
field field, domain, province, sphere, territory, bailiwick are comparable when they denote the limits in which a person, an institution, or a department of knowledge, of art, or of human endeavor appropriately or necessarily confines his or its activity or influence and outside of which by implication he or it may not or should not go.
Field implies restriction by choice or by necessity, but it seldom suggests permanent limitation
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a European war narrows the field of commerce for neutral American nations

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he chose the development of industries in the South as his field of investigation

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the philosopher and the practical man . . . each is in his own field, supreme— Buckle

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a writer whose reputation . . . has been pretty much confined to the whodunit fieldKelly

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Domain is used chiefly in reference to departments of knowledge, of art, and of human endeavor viewed abstractly; it implies exclusive possession and control of a clearly defined field and a title to regard all outside interference or all intrusion into that field as trespass or invasion
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the domain of science

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the domain of the spiritual

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what is the difference between the legitimate music of verse and the music it attains by trespassing on the domain of a sister art?— Babbitt

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those who believe in the reality of a world of the spirit —the poet, the artist, the mystic—are at one in believing that there are other domains than that of physics— Jeans

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Province is used in reference not only to the arts and sciences, each of which may be said to have its own domain, but also to a person or institution that because of his or its office, aims, or special character can be said to have jurisdiction, competence, power, or influence within clearly defined limits
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it is within the province of a parent rather than of a teacher to discipline a pupil for misconduct out of school

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it is often stated that art goes beyond its province when it attempts to teach morals

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the almost impertinently realistic explorations into behavior which are the province of the psychiatrist— Sapir

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Province is also used in the sense of function (see also FUNCTION n 1) and in the sense of a part of a larger domain
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I should like the reader to accept engineering as a province of physics: so that the feats of the one may serve as credentials for the discoveries of the other— Darrow

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Sphere, even more than domain, throws emphasis on clear circumscription of limits; it therefore suggests apartness rather than fundamental differences and carries no hint of danger of trespass or interference
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the aesthetic and ethical spheres . . . were never sharply distinguished by the Greeks— Dickinson

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in the sphere of morals we must often be content to wait until our activity is completed to appreciate its beauty or its ugliness— Ellis

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in the life of a man whose circumstances and talents are not very exceptional there should be a large sphere where what is vaguely termed "herd instinct" dominates, and a small sphere into which it does not penetrate— Russell

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a long and profound process of social change . . . but this time in the economic sphereStrachey

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Territory comes very close to domain in implying a field possessed and controlled and regarded as one's own; it does not, however, carry the implications so strong in domain of rightful ownership, of sovereignty, and of the title to inviolability; it may even suggest that the field has been usurped or taken over by the science, art, or activity in question
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prose has preempted a lion's share of the territory once held, either in sovereignty or on equal terms, by poetry— Lowes

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if passageways connect the domain of physics with the domains of life or of spirit, physics ought in time to discover these passageways, for they start from her own territoryJeans

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Bailiwick, basically the jurisdiction of a bailiff, is increasingly used in an extended and playful sense in reference to an individual and the special and limited province or domain in which he may or does exercise authority. It often also carries a connotation of petty yet despotic display of power
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a politician whose influence does not extend beyond his own bailiwick

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he will not get along with others until he learns to keep within his own bailiwick

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we may neither be angry nor gay in the presence of the moon, nor may we dare to think in her bailiwickStephens

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the largest problems are in the bailiwick of the social scientist— Street

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Analogous words: limits, bounds, confines (see singular nouns at LIMIT): extent, area, *size, magnitude fiendish, devilish, diabolical, diabolic, demoniac, demonic are comparable when they mean having or manifesting the qualities associated with infernal or hellish beings called devils, demons, and fiends.
Fiendish usually implies excessive cruelty or malignity
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Jiendish tortures

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the fiendish joy that illumined his usually stolid countenance sent a sudden disgust and horror through meHudson

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Devilish frequently suggests abnormal wickedness
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devilish orgies

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devilish treachery

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but it often also suggests superhuman or satanic ingenuity or craft or capacity for destruction
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showed no compunction in planning devilish engines of military destruction— Ellis

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The term is often used as an intensive that substitutes for profanity
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devilish good dinner— Dickens

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Diabolical often and devilish sometimes connote colder and more calculating malevolence than fiendish
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diabolical cruelty

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diabolical ingenuity

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a diabolical sneer

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people suffering from the paranoia of persecution often imagine that they are the victims of a diabolical secret society— Huxley

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Diabolic is often used interchangeably with diabolical, but the former term may be preferred when the reference is to devils as individuals of a given character or origin rather than to their malign qualities
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the difference between the angelic and the diabolic temperament— Shaw

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[the heroic age's] heroes were doughty men to whom diabolic visitors were no more unusual than angelic ones— Krutch

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Demoniac and demonic often suggest frenzy or excesses (as of one possessed)
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demoniac strength

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demonic laughter

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More frequently they suggest the inexplicable or superhuman element in life or, especially, in genius
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in the solidest kingdom of routine and the senses, he [Goethe] showed the lurking demonic power— Emerson

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the rapt, demonic features of the Magic Muse— Hewlett

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he rode swift horses; he fought duels; he had burning love affairs; he traveled with demoniac restlessness throughout Europe— Highet

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Analogous words: hellish, *infernal: malign, malefic, maleficent, baleful, *sinister: malignant, malevolent, *malicious

New Dictionary of Synonyms. 2014.

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  • Field — (f[=e]ld), n. [OE. feld, fild, AS. feld; akin to D. veld, G. feld, Sw. f[ a]lt, Dan. felt, Icel. fold field of grass, AS. folde earth, land, ground, OS. folda.] 1. Cleared land; land suitable for tillage or pasture; cultivated ground; the open… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Field — (f[=e]ld), n. [OE. feld, fild, AS. feld; akin to D. veld, G. feld, Sw. f[ a]lt, Dan. felt, Icel. fold field of grass, AS. folde earth, land, ground, OS. folda.] 1. Cleared land; land suitable for tillage or pasture; cultivated ground; the open… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Field — or fields may refer to: * Field (agriculture), an area of land used to cultivate crops for agricultural purposes * Field of study, a branch of knowledge * Playing field, in sports, the area in which the sport is played * Visual field or field of… …   Wikipedia

  • Field — (engl. Begriff für Feld) bezeichnet: einen Ausdruck aus der Fernsehtechnik, siehe Halbbild einen Ausdruck aus der Datenbanktechnik, siehe SQL Field ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Albert Field (1910–1990), australischer Politiker Anthony …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • field — [fēld] n. [ME feld < OE, akin to Ger feld, Du veld < IE * pelt < base * pele , * pla , flat and broad > L planus, plane, Gr palamē, flat hand] 1. a wide stretch of open land; plain 2. a piece of cleared land, set off or enclosed, for… …   English World dictionary

  • field — ► NOUN 1) an area of open land, especially one planted with crops or pasture. 2) a piece of land used for a sport or game. 3) a subject of study or sphere of activity. 4) a region or space with a particular property: a magnetic field. 5) a space… …   English terms dictionary

  • Field's — is the biggest shopping centre in Denmark and the largest in Scandinavia.It is located in Ørestad, Copenhagen, close to the E20 motorway and Ørestad station on the Copenhagen Metro. It takes 10 minutes from Ørestad station to the city centre (Kgs …   Wikipedia

  • field — [n1] open land that can be cultivated acreage, cropland, enclosure, farmland, garden, glebe, grassland, green, ground, lea, mead, meadow, moorland, pasture, patch, plot, ranchland, range, terrain, territory, tillage, tract, vineyard; concepts 509 …   New thesaurus

  • Field — Field, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Fielded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Fielding}.] 1. To take the field. [Obs.] Spenser. [1913 Webster] 2. (Ball Playing) To stand out in the field, ready to catch, stop, or throw the ball. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Field — Field, v. t. (Ball Playing) To catch, stop, throw, etc. (the ball), as a fielder. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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