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单词 community
释义

community


com·mu·ni·ty

C0518800 (kə-myo͞o′nĭ-tē)n. pl. com·mu·ni·ties 1. a. A group of people living in the same locality and under the same government.b. The district or locality in which such a group lives.2. a. A group of people having common interests: the scientific community; the international business community.b. A group viewed as forming a distinct segment of society: the gay community; the community of color.3. a. Similarity or identity: a community of interests.b. Sharing, participation, and fellowship: a sense of community.4. Society as a whole; the public.5. a. A group of organisms interacting with one another and with the environment in a specific region.b. The region occupied by a group of interacting organisms.
[Middle English communite, citizenry, from Old French, from Latin commūnitās, fellowship, from commūnis, common; see common.]

community

(kəˈmjuːnɪtɪ) n, pl -ties1. (Human Geography) a. the people living in one localityb. the locality in which they livec. (as modifier): community spirit. 2. (Sociology) a group of people having cultural, religious, ethnic, or other characteristics in common: the Protestant community. 3. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a group of nations having certain interests in common4. the public in general; society5. common ownership or participation6. similarity or agreement: community of interests. 7. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) (in Wales since 1974 and Scotland since 1975) the smallest unit of local government; a subdivision of a district8. (Environmental Science) ecology a group of interdependent plants and animals inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other through food and other relationships[C14: from Latin commūnitās, from commūnis common]

com•mu•ni•ty

(kəˈmyu nɪ ti)

n., pl. -ties. 1. a group of people who reside in a specific locality, share government, and often have a common cultural and historical heritage. 2. a locality inhabited by such a group. 3. a social, religious, occupational, or other group sharing common characteristics or interests: the business community. 4. the public; society. 5. a group of associated nations sharing common interests or heritage: the Western European community. 6. an assemblage of interacting plant and animal populations occupying a given area. 7. joint possession, enjoyment, liability, etc.: community of property. 8. similar character; agreement: community of interests. [1325–75; comunete < Middle French < Latin commūnitās <commūni(s) common]

com·mu·ni·ty

(kə-myo͞o′nĭ-tē) A group of plants and animals living and interacting with one another in a particular place. A community can be small and local, as in a pond or city park, or it can be regional or global, as in a rain forest or the ocean.

community

- It can refer to group of animals or plants living together and was first used to refer to a "body of commons" or a social or political entity.See also related terms for social.

Community

 a body of people living in the same locality or having a common language or interest. See also cluster, combination.Examples: community of feeling, 1823; of flies; of good, 1645; of interests, 1875; of power, 1561; of studies, 1841; of ulcers, 1541; of wives, 1564.
Thesaurus
Noun1.community - a group of people living in a particular local areacommunity - a group of people living in a particular local area; "the team is drawn from all parts of the community"assemblage, gathering - a group of persons together in one placeparish - a local church communityconvent - a community of people in a religious order (especially nuns) living togetherhouse - the members of a religious community living togetherIslam Nation, Islamic Ummah, Muslim Ummah, Umma, Ummah - the Muslim community or people, considered to extend from Mauritania to Pakistan; "moderate Muslims urge the Ummah to reject the terrorism of radical Muslims"speech community - people sharing a given language or dialectneighborhood, neighbourhood - people living near one another; "it is a friendly neighborhood"; "my neighborhood voted for Bush"small town, village, settlement - a community of people smaller than a towncrossroads, hamlet - a community of people smaller than a villagehorde - a nomadic communityAleut - a community of Native Americans who speak an Eskimo-Aleut language and inhabit the Aleutian Islands and southwestern Alaska; "the Aleut and the Eskimo are related culturally and linguistically"Circassian - a mostly Sunni Muslim community living in northwestern Caucasia
2.community - common ownership; "they shared a community of possessions"ownership - the relation of an owner to the thing possessed; possession with the right to transfer possession to others
3.community - a group of nations having common interests; "they hoped to join the NATO community"global organization, international organisation, international organization, world organisation, world organization - an international alliance involving many different countries
4.community - agreement as to goals; "the preachers and the bootleggers found they had a community of interests"community of interestsaccord, agreement - harmony of people's opinions or actions or characters; "the two parties were in agreement"
5.community - a district where people livecommunity - a district where people live; occupied primarily by private residencesresidential area, residential districthousing development - a residential area of similar dwellings built by property developers and usually under a single management; "they live in the new housing development"housing estate - a residential area where the houses were all planned and built at the same timedistrict, territorial dominion, territory, dominion - a region marked off for administrative or other purposesplanned community - a residential district that is planned for a certain class of residentsuptown - a residential part of town away from the central commercial districtsuburb, suburban area, suburbia - a residential district located on the outskirts of a cityexurbia - a residential area outside of a city and beyond suburbiatenement district - a residential district occupied primarily with tenement housesrabbit warren, warren - an overcrowded residential area
6.community - (ecology) a group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each othercommunity - (ecology) a group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each otherbiotic communitygroup, grouping - any number of entities (members) considered as a unitbionomics, environmental science, ecology - the branch of biology concerned with the relations between organisms and their environmentbiome - a major biotic community characterized by the dominant forms of plant life and the prevailing climate

community

noun1. society, people, public, association, population, residents, commonwealth, general public, populace, body politic, state, company He's well liked by the local community.2. district, area, quarter, region, sector, parish, neighbourhood, vicinity, locality, locality, locale, neck of the woods (informal) a black township on the outskirts of the mining community3. group, set, camp, circle, crowd, category Other organisations come to the festival to show their solidarity for the lesbian and gay community.

community

nounPersons as an organized body:people, public, society.
Translations
社区社团公众

community

(kəˈmjuːnəti) plural comˈmunities noun1. a group of people especially having the same religion or nationality and living in the same general area. the West Indian community in London. 社團,社區 社团,社区 2. the public in general. He did it for the good of the community; (also adjective) a community worker, a community centre. 公眾 公众

community

社区zhCN

community


bedroom community

A community in which most people commute to jobs elsewhere (and thus usually only come home to sleep during the work week). Since I'm still in school, I'm not sure I want to live in a town that's such a bedroom community—I want to be able to spend time with people during the day when I'm not in class.See also: bedroom, community

pillar of the community

One who is a particularly active, respected, and influential member of one's local social sphere. My grandfather was a pillar of the community because of how many people his businesses employed. She was long considered a pillar of the community, so she won the mayoral election with ease.See also: community, of, pillar

pick-up community

A community of men (often called "pick-up artists") devoted to using a specific set of strategies in order to seduce ("pick up") women. If you would just read some of those forums in the pick-up community, you would get laid a lot more!See also: community

a pillar of society

or

a pillar of the community

If you describe someone as a pillar of society or a pillar of the community, you mean that they are an active and respected member of a group of people. He is a pillar of society, the son every mother would love to have. My father had been a pillar of the community.See also: of, pillar, society

a pillar of society

a person regarded as a particularly responsible citizen. The use of pillar to mean ‘a person regarded as a mainstay or support for something’ is recorded from medieval times; Pillars of Society was the English title of an 1888 play by the Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen .See also: of, pillar, society

community


community

1. a. the people living in one locality b. the locality in which they live c. (as modifier): community spirit 2. a group of nations having certain interests in common 3. (in Wales since 1974 and Scotland since 1975) the smallest unit of local government; a subdivision of a district 4. Ecology a group of interdependent plants and animals inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other through food and other relationships

Community

An interacting population of individuals living in a specific area with increased emphasis on sustainable building and sustainable development. Design and building-related practices enhancing and supporting community ideals and functions are considered more sustainable than those that do not, all else being equal.

community

Any set of social relationships operating within certain boundaries, locations or territories. The term (as used by both sociologists and geographers) has descriptive and prescriptive connotations in both popular and academic usage. It may refer to social relationships which take place within geographically defined areas or neighbourhoods, or to relationships which are not locally operative but exist at a more abstract, ideological level. For example, the term ‘lesbian community’ may refer to an actual settlement of women (e.g. ‘lesbian ghetto’, see E. Ettore, 1978), or it may refer to a collective of women sharing ideas and life styles, but not necessarily residing together in the same spatial area.

It has been suggested that the concept is one of the most difficult and controversial in modern society. Lowe (1986) suggests that it ‘ranks only with the notion of class in this respect’. It is certainly a term which has attracted many different interpretations and has been subjected to wide use and abuse.

In popular usage, the term has often been associated with positive connotations, as in the phrases ‘a sense of community’ or ‘community spirit’. It is clear that the term is not only descriptive, but also normative and ideological. Sociological discourse has often reinforced prescriptive usages of the term. Influenced by a tradition of 19th-century romanticism, some sociologists have regarded community as necessarily beneficial to human needs and social interaction. This tradition was particularly strong in the 19th century, but is by no means absent in 20th-century sociological thought.

In the 19th century, the German sociologist TÖNNIES drew a distinction between what he called GEMEINSCHAFT and GESELLSCHAFT. The former denoted community relationships which were characterized by their intimacy and durability: status was ascribed rather than achieved; and kin relationships took place within a shared territory and were made meaningful by a shared culture. Conversely, Gesellschaft gave rise to relationships which were impersonal, fleeting and contractual. Such relationships were both rational and calculative rather than affective: status was based on merit and was therefore achieved; and gesellschaftlich relationships were competitive and often characterized by anonymity and alienation. Tönnies believed that the processes of industrialization and urbanization would give rise to the destruction of gemeinschaftlich relationships and that gesellschaftlich relationships would consequently flourish. He was concerned by what he took to be the breakdown of traditional society, authority and the loss of community. In Tönnies’ work we can see the high value he implicitly placed on the old social order and his ambivalence towards industrialization and urbanization (compare SIMMEL). It is this romanticized view of traditional society’ that has given rise to the association of the concept of community’ with ideas of social support, intimacy and security Thus traditional communities have often been portrayed as close-knit and as facilitating cooperation and mutual aid between members. In contrast, the URBANIZATION process has been identified as destructive of both ‘community’ and communities. Research by Young and Willmott (1960) and Gans (1962) has, however, raised serious doubts about any such simple association between urbanization and ‘loss of community’.

Sociologists have usually been less concerned with categorizing and identifying the physical and geographical characteristics of communities than with examining the nature and quality of the social relationships sustained by them. Recent sociology has also been concerned with the analysis of community action and collective resistance to social problems (Castells, 1976).

Whatever the definitional difficulties, all communities, both real and symbolic, exist and operate within boundaries or territories. Boundaries serve to demarcate social membership from nonmembership. Communities may be seen to be inclusive of some people and social groups, but exclusive of others. In some cases, community boundaries are rigidly maintained (e.g. some religious communities), in others the boundaries are more fluid and open.

Worsley (1987) has suggested that, despite the difficulties involved in theorizing about ‘community’ and communities’, three broad meanings can be identified within sociological literature. The first he describes as ‘community as locality’. Here the interpretation of the term comes closest to its geographical meaning of a ‘human settlement within a fixed and bounded local territory’. Secondly, he suggests that ‘community’ has been used to denote a ‘network of interrelationships’ (Stacey, 1969). In this usage, community relationships can be characterized by conflict as well as by mutuality and reciprocity In the third usage, community can be seen to refer to a particular type of social relationship; one that possesses certain qualities. It infers the existence of a ‘community spirit’ or ‘community feeling’. This usage comes closest to a common-sense usage and does not necessarily imply the existence of a local geographical area or neighbourhood.

Community remains an important, if controversial, concept in sociology. See CHICAGO SCHOOL, COMMUNITY STUDIES, COMMUNITY CARE, COMMUNITARIANISM.

community

[kə′myü·nə·dē] (ecology) Aggregation of organisms characterized by a distinctive combination of two or more ecologically related species; an example is a deciduous forest. Also known as ecological community.

community

A group of people having common rights, privileges, or interests, or living in the same place under the same laws and regulations.

community


community

 [kŏ-mu´nĭ-te] a group of persons residing together in face-to-face association; a group of persons with whom an individual identifies as a source of identity and potential support.continuing care community life care community.life care community a living arrangement for older adults that provides several levels of care within one facility or complex. As the resident requires more health supervision, he or she moves from areas that are more independent to those where care is provided under the supervision of a registered nurse. Life care communities usually require an entry fee as well as a monthly fee. Called also continuing care community.therapeutic community a specially structured mental treatment center, employing group and milieu therapy and encouraging the patient to function within social norms.

com·mu·ni·ty

(kŏ-myū'ni-tē), A given segment of a society or a population.

community

(kə-myo͞o′nĭ-tē)n. pl. communi·ties 1. a. A group of people living in the same locality and under the same government.b. The district or locality in which such a group lives.2. a. A group of organisms interacting with one another and with the environment in a specific region.b. The region occupied by a group of interacting organisms.

community

A specific group of people, often living in a defined geographical area, who share a common culture, values and norms, arranged in a social structure according to relationships, which the community has developed over a period of time.

com·mu·ni·ty

(kŏ-myūn'i-tē) A group of people united by some common feature or shared interest; the social context in which professional services are provided. A community may be united by physical or geographic factors, by one or more common characteristics such as age, gender, developmental level, culture, or health or disability status, or by a shared perspective.
See also: community-based practice
[L. communitas, fellowship, fr. communis, common]

community

a naturally occurring group of different species of organisms that lives together and interacts as a selfcontained unit in the same habitat, relatively independent of inputs and outputs from adjacent communities. Ideally, it is selfcontained in terms of food relationships, and usually the only energy required from outside is that of the sun.

Patient discussion about community

Q. is there a nurses community in this site?! A. Here: http://www.imedix.com/Nurses.
Do you work as a nurse yourself? Do you have any special interest or questions about nursing?

Q. how do i join the nurses community? A. Go to 'My stuff' and then click on 'add your health interests', then add the tag "Nurses" to 'my interests'.
Once you have added it, click on 'save changes'.

Q. Hi, I'm new to the ADHD community. I was very happy to hear about this site. Can anyone let me know how it works? How do I meet people who are dealing with ADHD?A. I'm sorry to hear about your son Kavon. I actually know a lot of people that suffer from the same problem, but they are able to cope with it quite well.

More discussions about community

Community


Related to Community: Community Bank

COMMUNITY. This word has several meanings; when used in common parlance it signifies the body of the people.
2. In the civil law, by community is understood corporations, or bodies politic. Dig. 3, 4.
3. In the French law, which has been adopted in this respect in Louisiana, Civ. Code, art. 2371, community is a species of partnership, which a man and woman contract when they are lawfully married to each other. It consists of the profits of all, the effects of which the husband has the administration and enjoyment, either of right or in fact; of the produce of the reciprocal industry and labor of both husband and wife, and of the estates which they may acquire during the marriage, either by donations made jointly to them, or by purchase, or in any other similar way, even although the purchase he made in the name of one of the two, and not of both; because in that case the period of time when the purchase is made is alone attended to, and not the person who made the purchase. 10 L. R. 146; Id. 172, 181; 1 N. S. 325; 4 N. S. 212. The debts contracted during the marriage enter into the community, and must be acquitted out of the common fund; but not the debts contracted before the marriage.
4. The community is either, first, conventional, or that which is formed by an express agreement in the contract of marriage itself; by this contract the legal community may be modified, as to the proportions which each shall take, or as to the things which shall compose it; Civ. Code of L. art. 2393; second, legal, which takes place when the parties make no agreement on this subject in the contract of marriage; when it is regulated by the law of the domicil they had at the time of marriage.
5. The effects which compose the community of gains, are divided into two equal portions between the heirs, at the dissolution of the marriage. Civ. Code of L. art. 2375. See Poth. h.t.; Toull. h.t.; Civ. Code of Lo. tit. 6, c. 2, s. 4.
6. In another sense, community is the right which all men have, according to the laws of nature, to use all things. Wolff, Inst. Sec. 186.

FinancialSeeLife Care CommunityFinancialSeeolé

community


Related to community: Community Bank
  • noun

Synonyms for community

noun society

Synonyms

  • society
  • people
  • public
  • association
  • population
  • residents
  • commonwealth
  • general public
  • populace
  • body politic
  • state
  • company

noun district

Synonyms

  • district
  • area
  • quarter
  • region
  • sector
  • parish
  • neighbourhood
  • vicinity
  • locality
  • locale
  • neck of the woods

noun group

Synonyms

  • group
  • set
  • camp
  • circle
  • crowd
  • category

Synonyms for community

noun persons as an organized body

Synonyms

  • people
  • public
  • society

Synonyms for community

noun a group of people living in a particular local area

Related Words

  • assemblage
  • gathering
  • parish
  • convent
  • house
  • Islam Nation
  • Islamic Ummah
  • Muslim Ummah
  • Umma
  • Ummah
  • speech community
  • neighborhood
  • neighbourhood
  • small town
  • village
  • settlement
  • crossroads
  • hamlet
  • horde
  • Aleut
  • Circassian

noun common ownership

Related Words

  • ownership

noun a group of nations having common interests

Related Words

  • global organization
  • international organisation
  • international organization
  • world organisation
  • world organization

noun agreement as to goals

Synonyms

  • community of interests

Related Words

  • accord
  • agreement

noun a district where people live

Synonyms

  • residential area
  • residential district

Related Words

  • housing development
  • housing estate
  • district
  • territorial dominion
  • territory
  • dominion
  • planned community
  • uptown
  • suburb
  • suburban area
  • suburbia
  • exurbia
  • tenement district
  • rabbit warren
  • warren

noun (ecology) a group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other

Synonyms

  • biotic community

Related Words

  • group
  • grouping
  • bionomics
  • environmental science
  • ecology
  • biome
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