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 domain [dәu'mein]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 领域, 领土, 产业, 范围

[计] 域, 区域, 支配命令

[化] 域; 畴

[经] 产业, 房地产, 产业所有权


  1. The kitchen is my wife's domain, she doesn't like me going into it.
    厨房是我妻子的领地,她不愿让我进去。
  2. Military history is really outside my domain.
    我对军队史实在一窍不通。
  3. As soon as you create an account for the user, the user can participate in a secure domain.
    一旦您为用户创建了一个帐号,用户就可以进入安全域中。


domain
[ noun ]
  1. a particular environment or walk of life

  2. <noun.state>
    his social sphere is limited
    it was a closed area of employment
    he's out of my orbit
  3. territory over which rule or control is exercised

  4. <noun.location>
    his domain extended into Europe
    he made it the law of the land
  5. (mathematics) the set of values of the independent variable for which a function is defined

  6. <noun.group>
  7. people in general; especially a distinctive group of people with some shared interest

  8. <noun.group>
    the Western world
  9. the content of a particular field of knowledge

  10. <noun.cognition>


Domain \Do*main"\, n. [F. domaine, OF. demaine, L. dominium,
property, right of ownership, fr. dominus master, owner. See
{Dame}, and cf {Demesne}, {Dungeon}.]
1. Dominion; empire; authority.

2. The territory over which dominion or authority is exerted;
the possessions of a sovereign or commonwealth, or the
like. Also used figuratively. [WordNet sense 2]

The domain of authentic history. --E. Everett.

The domain over which the poetic spirit ranges. --J.
C. Shairp.

3. Landed property; estate; especially, the land about the
mansion house of a lord, and in his immediate occupancy;
demesne. [WordNet sense 2] --Shenstone.

4. (Law) Ownership of land; an estate or patrimony which one
has in his own right; absolute proprietorship; paramount
or sovereign ownership.

5. (Math.) the set of values which the independent variable
of a function may take. Contrasted to {range}, which is
the set of values taken by the dependent variable.
[WordNet sense 3]
[PJC]

6. (Math.) a connected set of points, also called a {region}.
[PJC]

7. (Physics) a region within a ferromagnetic material,
composed of a number of atoms whose magnetic poles are
pointed in the same direction, and which may move together
in a coordinated manner when disturbed, as by heating. The
direction of polarity of adjacent domains may be
different, but may be aligned by a strong external
magnetic field.
[PJC]

8. (Computers) an address within the internet computer
network, which may be a single computer, a network of
computers, or one of a number of accounts on a multiuser
computer. The domain specifies the location (host
computer) to which communications on the internet are
directed. Each domain has a corresponding 32-bit number
usually represented by four numbers separated by periods,
as 128.32.282.56. Each domain may also have an
alphabetical name, usually composed of a name plus an
extension separated by a period, as worldsoul.org; the
alphabetical name is referred to as a domain name.
[PJC]

9. (Immunology) the three-dimensional structure within an
immunoglobulin which is formed by one of the homology
regions of a heavy or light chain. --Dict. Sci. Tech.
[PJC]

10. the field of knowledge, expertise, or interest of a
person; as, he had a limited domain of discourse; I can't
comment on that, it's outside my domain. [WordNet sense
5]

Syn: domain, realm, field, area. [PJC]

11. a particular environment or walk of life. [WordNet sense
1]

Syn: sphere, domain, area, orbit, field, arena. [PJC]

12. people in general; especially a distinctive group of
people with some shared interest. [WordNet sense 4]

Syn: world, domain. [PJC]

{Public domain},

1. the territory belonging to a State or to the general
government; public lands. [U.S.]

2. the situation or status of intellectual property which is
not protected by copyright, patent or other restriction on
use. Anything

{in the public domain} may be used by anyone without
restriction. The effective term of force of copyrights and
patents are limited by statute, and after the term
expires, the writings and inventions thus protected go
into the public domain and are free for use by all.

{Right of eminent domain}, that superior dominion of the
sovereign power over all the property within the state,
including that previously granted by itself, which
authorizes it to appropriate any part thereof to a
necessary public use, reasonable compensation being made.

  1. The fact that the Stock Exchange will take no decision on the date of T+5 until October has been in the public domain for months.
  2. Germany has achieved this partly because the securities business has always been the domain of the banks. The London Stock Exchange, meanwhile, has been left to pick up the pieces from the unfortunate episode.
  3. But David Shorrock, executive vice president of Reflectone Inc., insists quality isn't the domain of either top management or workers.
  4. The government encouraged the parallel bankers by ceding such services as marketing treasury bills that had been the exclusive domain of banks.
  5. Or a local government could claim eminent domain over your house to build a highway, then claim the "compensation" is a delay in the highway construction for a few years.
  6. The more information is in the public domain, the more companies will feel comfortable explaining detail and context to analysts and institutions. The stock exchange has been reviewing its guidelines, but so far has found no reason to change them.
  7. He contends that the Pebble Beach trademark protects only the company's distinct logo rendering of the tree with waves in the background, and that after 100 years of being freely snapped, the tree is now in the public domain.
  8. A GlavLit committee went through 4,000 of the banned titles in the past year and returned 3,500 to the public domain, the newspaper said.
  9. Before we as adults, parents and business people begin "pointing the finger of blame," let's make sure we have done all we can to improve our own educational domain at home.
  10. Over the past two years, the Fed has given a handful of banks' securities affiliates permission to underwrite and deal in a variety of corporate, asset-backed and municipal securities that had previously been the sole domain of securities firms.
  11. It shows just what modern woodworkers have to offer, whether in the public or private domain. Of course, as in any exhibition, some works are more to one's personal taste than others - this is exactly as it should be.
  12. While the session was held before the murders and resulting expulsion order, "the issue already was in the public domain," department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
  13. He argued such issues were not within a governor's domain.
  14. The largest undeveloped plot of land in the city, a 76-acre, riverfront rail yard on Manhattan's West Side, will remain the private domain of Donald Trump, the developer announced Wednesday.
  15. Tigue and Frankman said St. Paul abused eminent domain powers to seize the Faust.
  16. "In the future," Mr. Breeden wrote, "we will work hard to make sure that our responses to your letters are as prompt as they are comprehensive." It's a two-pronged approach rarely seen in the mutual fund arena, the small investor's domain.
  17. Until now, management of such stock issues has been the near-exclusive domain of Japan's major financial houses.
  18. "Congress legally took the land by eminent domain, the way the government can take your house for an airport," says Marvin J. Sonosky, who represented the Sioux for 24 years.
  19. The Defense Ministry acknowledged the two countries exchanged technical information "mainly in the domain of safety," and "to the benefit of both parties." "It did not lead to any transfer of concepts or formulas.
  20. Mr. Morgan's girlfriend had served in the Bolivian government and had high-reaching connections there with the potential to help expand Tesoro's domain of foreign oil properties.
  21. Mr. Benninger said MGM Grand will have to use public domain films or buy the rights to other movies for its attractions.
  22. The more information in the public domain, the less insider dealing is a problem.
  23. It is hard to see how that structure can be other than federal in form, but this should not mean that the union would inevitably encroach on the powers of its member states in every domain.
  24. Critics have contended for years that the job is done and that it's time to abolish REA and put rural power co-ops into the private domain.
  25. Although voice transmission will remain in Telefonica's domain for the foreseeable future, the deregulation will affect the high growth and high margin areas of the telecommunications sector.
  26. Bored with discos and chic bars, young women have used their rising purchasing power to assert themselves in the male domain of "out-of-the-ordinary experiences, just like eating ethnic food, or going to Bali and Tahiti," says Hikaru Hayashi.
  27. All such attention to detail takes place before a space is cast; the final surface is left as it emerges. The creation of 'House' moved Whiteread's work, for this piece at least, decisively into the public domain.
  28. She would not comment on the memo, which she described as "private, not something that should be in the public domain."
  29. For example, a flower removes the notion that sport is predominantly a male domain, and it is 'relevant to the green issues'. Not long ago the zebra looked like overtaking the springbok.
  30. Wright acknowledged the symbolism of Bush coming to his domain rather than insisting the speaker go to the vice president's office.
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