Definitions for Fields

Fields Fields

Spelling: [feeldz]
IPA: /fildz/

Fields is a 6 letter English word. It's valid Scrabble word worth 10 points. It's valid Words with friends word worth 11 points.

You can make 126 anagrams from letters in Fields (defils).

Definitions for Fields

noun

  1. W. C (William Claude Dukenfield) 1880–1946, U.S. vaudeville and motion-picture comedian.
  2. Dorothy, 1905–74, U.S. librettist and lyricist.
  3. an expanse of open or cleared ground, especially a piece of land suitable or used for pasture or tillage.
  4. Sports. a piece of ground devoted to sports or contests; playing field. (in betting) all the contestants or numbers that are grouped together as one: (in football) the players on the playing ground. the area in which field events are held.
  5. Baseball. the team in the field, as opposed to the one at bat. the outfield.
  6. a sphere of activity, interest, etc., especially within a particular business or profession:
  7. the area or region drawn on or serviced by a business or profession; outlying areas where business activities or operations are carried on, as opposed to a home or branch office:
  8. a job location remote from regular workshop facilities, offices, or the like.
  9. Military. the scene or area of active military operations. a battleground. a battle. Informal. an area located away from the headquarters of a commander.
  10. an expanse of anything:
  11. any region characterized by a particular feature, resource, activity, etc.:
  12. the surface of a canvas, shield, etc., on which something is portrayed:
  13. (in a flag) the ground of each division.
  14. Physics. the influence of some agent, as electricity or gravitation, considered as existing at all points in space and defined by the force it would exert on an object placed at any point in space. Compare electric field, gravitational field, magnetic field.
  15. Also called field of view. Optics. the entire angular expanse visible through an optical instrument at a given time.
  16. Electricity. the structure in a generator or motor that produces a magnetic field around a rotating armature.
  17. Mathematics. a number system that has the same properties relative to the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division as the number system of all real numbers; a commutative division ring.
  18. Photography. the area of a subject that is taken in by a lens at a particular diaphragm opening.
  19. Psychology. the total complex of interdependent factors within which a psychological event occurs and is perceived as occurring.
  20. Computers. one or more related characters treated as a unit and constituting part of a record, for purposes of input, processing, output, or storage by a computer: (in a punch card) any number of columns regularly used for recording the same information.
  21. Television. one half of the scanning lines required to form a complete television frame. In the U.S., two fields are displayed in 1/30 second: all the odd-numbered lines in one field and all the even lines in the next field. Compare frame (def 9).
  22. Numismatics. the blank area of a coin, other than that of the exergue.
  23. Fox Hunting. the group of participants in a hunt, exclusive of the master of foxhounds and his staff.
  24. Heraldry. the whole area or background of an escutcheon.

Idioms

  1. in the field, in actual use or in a situation simulating actual use or application; away from a laboratory, workshop, or the like: in contact with a prime source of basic data: within a given profession:
  2. keep the field, to remain in competition or in battle; continue to contend:
  3. out in left field. left field (def 3).
  4. play the field, Informal. to vary one's activities. to date a number of persons rather than only one:
  5. take the field, to begin to play, as in football or baseball; go into action. to go into battle:

adjective

  1. Sports. of, taking place, or competed for on the field and not on the track, as the discus throw or shot put. of or relating to field events.
  2. Military. of or relating to campaign and active combat service as distinguished from service in rear areas or at headquarters:
  3. of or relating to a field.
  4. grown or cultivated in a field.
  5. working in the fields of a farm:
  6. working as a salesperson, engineer, representative, etc., in the field:

verb (used with object)

  1. Baseball, Cricket. to catch or pick up (the ball) in play: to place (a player, group of players, or a team) in the field to play.
  2. to place in competition:
  3. to answer or reply skillfully:
  4. to put into action or on duty:
  5. Informal. field-test.

verb (used without object)

  1. to act as a fielder; field the ball.
  2. to take to the field.

Origin of Fields

before 1000; Middle English, Old English feld; cognate with German Feld

Examples for Fields

The roads are empty, the Fields are deserted, the houses of entertainment are closed.

When there was no work in the Fields we learned the ways of cooking corn, and to make pots.

Not long ago, a whole host of artists were plowing these Fields—Eric Clapton, B.B. King, Johnny Winter.

The focus here was on how fast oil would come out of the Canadian Fields.

Men cross the river at shallow points with herds of animals while women tend the Fields in colorful dresses.

The Fields and wood-paths have as yet few charms to entice the wanderer.

"Sir Humphrey Tennant of Ashby may till his own Fields for me," he cried.

The mother had left the Fields to become a librarian and her love of literature passed on to her three children.

I fancied it in the Fields, in the gardens, in the palace, in the prison.

With exquisite timing, religious historian Karen Armstrong steps forth with Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence.

Word Value for Fields
Scrable

10

Words with friends

11

Similar words for Fields
Word of the day