释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024do•main /doʊˈmeɪn/USA pronunciation n. [countable]- a field or area of thought, etc;
subject; area of interest:He works in the domain of public health. - Governmentthe territory governed by a ruler or government:The domains stretched for hundreds of miles in every direction.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024do•main (dō mān′),USA pronunciation n. - a field of action, thought, influence, etc.:the domain of science.
- Governmentthe territory governed by a single ruler or government;
realm. - a realm or range of personal knowledge, responsibility, etc.
- a region characterized by a specific feature, type of growth or wildlife, etc.:We entered the domain of the pine trees.
- Lawland to which there is superior title and absolute ownership.
- Mathematics
- the set of values assigned to the independent variables of a function.
- Mathematicsregion (def. 11a).
- [Physics.]one of many regions of magnetic polarity within a ferromagnetic body, each consisting of a number of atoms having a common polarity, and collectively determining the magnetic properties of the body by their arrangement.
- Crystallographya connected region with uniform polarization in a twinned ferroelectric crystal.
- Late Latin dominicum, noun, nominal use of neuter of Latin dominicus of a master, equivalent. to domin(us) lord + -icus -ic
- French domaine, alteration, by association with Latin dominium dominium, of Old French demeine
- 1595–1605
do•ma′ni•al, adj. domain, + n. [Computers.]- a group of computers and devices on a network that are administered under the same protocol.
- the top level in a domain name, indicating the type of organization or geographical location and officially designated in the suffix, as.com for commercial enterprises in the U.S.
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