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单词 sphere
释义

WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024
sphere /sfɪr/USA pronunciation   n. [countable]
  1. Mathematicsa solid, round figure or body whose surface is at all points the same distance from the center.
  2. Astronomya planet or star;
    heavenly body.
  3. the environment or surroundings within which a person or thing exists or operates:Does the UN's sphere of influence (= the area in which it is the dominant power) encompass the whole world?
  4. a field of something specified or mentioned:a sphere of knowledge.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024
sphere  (sfēr),USA pronunciation n., v., sphered, spher•ing. 
n. 
  1. Mathematics[Geom.]
    • a solid geometric figure generated by the revolution of a semicircle about its diameter;
      a round body whose surface is at all points equidistant from the center. Equation:x2 + y2 + z2 = r2.
    • the surface of such a figure;
      a spherical surface.
  2. any rounded body approximately of this form;
    a globular mass, shell, etc.
  3. Astronomy
    • a planet or star;
      heavenly body.
    • See celestial sphere. 
    • any of the transparent, concentric, spherical shells, or layers, in which, according to ancient belief, the planets, stars, and other heavenly bodies were set.
  4. the place or environment within which a person or thing exists;
    a field of activity or operation:to be out of one's professional sphere.
  5. a particular social world, stratum of society, or walk of life:His social sphere is small.
  6. a field of something specified:a sphere of knowledge.

v.t. 
  1. to enclose in or as if in a sphere.
  2. to form into a sphere.
  3. to place among the heavenly spheres.
  • Late Latin spēra, variant of sphēra
  • Old French spere
  • Greek sphaîra ball; replacing Middle English spere
  • Late Latin sphēra, Latin sphaera globe
  • 1250–1300
sphereless, adj. 
spherelike′, adj. 
    • 4.See corresponding entry in Unabridged orbit, area, province, compass, realm, domain.
    • 5.See corresponding entry in Unabridged class, rank.

-sphere, 
  1. a combining form of sphere (planisphere);
    having a special use in the names of the layers of gases and the like surrounding the earth and other celestial bodies (ionosphere).

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
sphere /sfɪə/ n
  1. a three-dimensional closed surface such that every point on the surface is equidistant from a given point, the centre
  2. the solid figure bounded by this surface or the space enclosed by it. Equation: (x–a)² + (y–b)² + (z–c)² = r², where r is the radius and (a, b, c) are the coordinates of the centre; surface area: 4πr²; volume: 4πr³/3
  3. any object having approximately this shape; globe
  4. the night sky considered as a vaulted roof; firmament
  5. any heavenly object such as a planet, natural satellite, or star
  6. (in the Ptolemaic or Copernican systems of astronomy) one of a series of revolving hollow globes, arranged concentrically, on whose transparent surfaces the sun (or in the Copernican system the earth), the moon, the planets, and fixed stars were thought to be set, revolving around the earth (or in the Copernican system the sun)
  7. a social class or stratum of society
vb (transitive) chiefly poetic
  1. to surround or encircle
  2. to place aloft or in the heavens
Etymology: 14th Century: from Late Latin sphēra, from Latin sphaera globe, from Greek sphaira
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
-sphere n combining form
  1. having the shape or form of a sphere: bathysphere
  2. indicating a spherelike enveloping mass: atmosphere

-spheric adj combining form
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