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单词 zone
释义

Definition of zone in English:

zone

noun zəʊnzoʊn
  • 1An area or stretch of land having a particular characteristic, purpose, or use, or subject to particular restrictions.

    a pedestrian zone
    a 40-km demilitarized zone
    figurative United are still in the relegation zone
    Example sentencesExamples
    • More than 100,000 people were belatedly evacuated from the zone following the disaster.
    • Though it was in the mandatory evacuation zone, fire officials decided removing the animals would be "a logistical nightmare," said the vice president of operations.
    • The village has been divided into different zones and athletes will have a colour-coded map to help them get around.
    • A large number come from disrupted family backgrounds, economically or socially deprived families or are children who come from conflict zones themselves.
    • A small strip of land, the demilitarized zone, separates the two sides.
    • The proposed enclosure would stretch from wet sand to dry areas above the tidal zone, but allowed people to walk at the water's edge along the beach.
    • Thousands of landmines have made patches of the fertile land into no-go zones.
    • He had never had a formal driving lesson and was spotted by witnesses doing up to 90 mph in a 30 mph zone minutes before the crash.
    • Heavy rains are expected in the earthquake zone this weekend.
    • But once inside this military zone the atmosphere is more relaxed and you are able to walk around freely.
    • The area in question has now been declared a disaster zone, and provincial funding has been requested to help the afflicted fishermen.
    • The chain wants to convert the ground floor to what they describe as a traditional ale house and wine bar, with no-smoking zones and a family area.
    • Essex Police said the incident had taken place in the main passenger terminal building, near check-in zones E and F, at around 9.40 am today.
    • Heslington gained their first win of the season and moved out of the relegation zone when they beat Londesbrough Park by seven wickets.
    • A buffer zone is recommended in which no irrigating is done.
    • We had a very large clump of cedar trees just in the fire zone itself.
    • Once in the security zone you can see some of the damage caused by the bombing.
    • Last year in those zones an astonishing 166,430 visitor permits were issued.
    • The Courthouse car park would be improved, and a pedestrian zone created at the front entrance.
    • It wants to split the area into parking zones at each end and introduce a road traffic order in the middle to safeguard the loading bay with a larger sign.
    Synonyms
    area, sector, section, belt, region, territory, tract, stretch, expanse, district, quarter, precinct, locality, neighbourhood, province, land
    1. 1.1Geography A well-defined region extending round the earth between definite limits, especially between two parallels of latitude.
      a zone of easterly winds
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This diagram is the same as the one above except that the major pressure and wind zones have been replaced by a typical isobaric weather map.
      • Located in the temperate monsoon zone, Japan is also strongly influenced by seasonal weather patterns.
      • The Atlantic zone receives trade winds and has high rainfall year-round.
      • Summers in this climatic zone are warm, rainy and uncomfortably humid.
      • The eastern Himalayan region is a high-rainfall zone that yields excessive water in basins during the monsoon.
    2. 1.2 A range of longitudes where a common standard time is used.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For instance, if you travel to Dallas, the watch will pick up signals from the Dallas radio station and reset itself for the appropriate time zone.
      • It's hard to live with someone in a different time zone, so I converted for the sake of the relationship.
      • Fortunately, whether your child is starting school in a new time zone or just down the street, you can help smooth the way.
      • The fact that this World Cup is basically being played in our time zone means most soccer fans are able to see a lot more of this event and understand how big it is.
      • With the last race having been in Malaysia, and the next in Australia, there's plenty to be said for staying out and getting used to the time zone.
      • Go and look at a map - Portugal is actually, if anything, below and to the left of most of Britain, so it makes complete sense that they are in the same time zone.
      • The comet was struck on July forth for the Eastern and Central time zones, but it hit on the third for us in the Rockies and the Western time zone.
      • As I turn back towards home, my mobile phone beeps into life. A new year greeting sent from a different time zone, halfway across the world.
      • We're four miles inside of the central time zone here, in south central Tennessee just north of the Georgia, Alabama border.
      • It was after seven, but Vancouver was in the same time zone, so I called Frank at home.
      • Also, those of us with satellite dishes can watch a different time zone.
      • I'm not sure when the time zone changes, so I'll have to figure that out.
      • Smith said the time zone would be attractive to broadcasters, who could schedule games in different timeslots.
      • If you take melatonin too early in the day, you may become sleepy before bedtime and it may take you longer to adapt to your new time zone.
      • If you're serious and plan quite a few early mornings, adjust your sleep schedule the same way you adjust to a new time zone.
      • The staging of the World Cup in a different time zone had an adverse effect on newspaper sales, with Sunday papers hit hardest of all.
      • Every eight hours, the results of the day's work are forwarded to the team in the next time zone, from Japan to Germany to the USA and back to Japan.
      • Mars will be closest to Earth in 2005 on October 29 or 30, depending on your time zone.
      • ‘If we can't run two offices in different locations in the same time zone then we have big problems,’ he said.
      • As for jet lag, if you have the luxury, one treatment is to slowly change your awake and sleep times to fit the new time zone.
    3. 1.3the zoneinformal (especially in sport) a state of such concentration that one is able to perform at the peak of one's physical or mental capabilities.
      I was in the zone, completing the first nine holes in one under par
  • 2Zoology Botany
    An encircling band or stripe of distinctive colour, texture, or character.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The basement membrane zone divides the epidermis from the dermis.
    • In the cambial zone, at least three patterns of cell differentiation can be distinguished.
    • In addition, plants that are colonized by mycorrhizal fungi have a zone termed the mycorrhizosphere.
    • ‘Palmate’ sclerites are situated in the dorsal zone of the animal's body.
    • Like modern frogs, she says, the bones show an inner zone of yellow, fatty marrow, encircled by an outer zone of red marrow.
    • As the root grows following seed germination, the stomatal zone overlaps with that of the root hairs.
  • 3archaic A belt or girdle worn round a person's body.

    Synonyms
    girdle, sash, strap, cummerbund, waistband, band, girth
verb zəʊnzoʊn
[with object]
  • 1Divide into or assign to zones.

    the park has been zoned into four distinct bioregions, each with its own ecological identity
    1. 1.1 Divide (a town or piece of land) into areas subject to particular restrictions on development and use.
      Houston, he told us, was the only town in the country that was zoned properly
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He said a further application would require a material contravention to give zoning authority and added he was surprised by the refusal.
      • First, consider the principle that time, place, and manner restrictions such as zoning generally do not violate the First Amendment.
      • For new construction, this can be of vital importance, particularly where zoning restricts building height.
      • Clint Eastwood ran for mayor on a platform that promised to prune back the plethora of local rules, regulations, building restrictions and zoning laws.
      • Pay particular attention to zoning in each of the alternatives proposed for your area.
      • The company will even lobby local government to change zoning regulations in order to get the location they want.
      • Check local regulations and zoning restrictions because some areas may have legally established separation distances.
      • There are no regulations, zoning restrictions, fences or white lines to tell you where to go.
      • However, it was explained at last week's meeting that this figure was arrived at due to current zoning regulations.
      • Stiff zoning laws, even when they're well-intended, result in unintended consequences.
      • Cllr Flynn says while Westport Town Councillors won't be zoning this particular piece of land they will be making their opinions felt.
      • The list included concerns voiced by the town planners and architects on land use zoning and floor area ratio.
      • The local zoning authorities for a long time just outright banned big box stores, stores of over something like 10,000 square feet.
      • Ms McEvoy said zoning in small villages and towns was essential to ensure controlled, structured and sustainable development.
      • All the indications are that Cherrywood will receive the town centre zoning.
      • Prescott says he is listening, and, because the urban plan covers zoning bylaws, input can make a difference.
      • Clearly, communities will need to move decisively to change zoning laws and building codes, in order to avoid a repeat of what we have seen.
      • The move was made to restrict zoning, said Stevens, in order to avoid having a retail store set up where it was unwanted.
      • I'm sure any zoning plan will be a small sacrifice for the recreational angler to make for the future sustainability of our fish stocks.
      • The 140 acres proposed for zoning also includes land adjacent to the Tullamore Road and Brittas Avenue.
    2. 1.2 Designate (a specific area) for use or development as a particular zone in planning.
      the land is zoned for housing
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority claims the cowboys were illegally using the former warehouse as a stable, a use it wasn't zoned for.
      • The owners have now had a change of mind and efforts are being made to lease the 8,000 sq. ft property, which is zoned for retail use.
      • The property is zoned for residential and part commercial use and is located beside The Elms and Braganza housing estates in Carlow town.
      • But much of the land is former industrial space that couldn't be recycled for new uses without government approval because it is still zoned for manufacturing.
      • If it zones something for a particular use and nobody wants it, then nothing happens.
      • Listowel town manager Michael McMahon asked councillors to consider zoning a portion of land for the use of discount retailers.
      • The Railway Square site is zoned for general business under the 2002 Waterford City Development Plan.
      • Local authorities could then zone it and then sell it on.
      • Only the 1,000 square feet now operating is zoned for that use.
      • Since the building is now zoned for residential use, the house can be occupied by only three unrelated people at a time.
      • The purpose of the proposed variation is to zone lands in Tullow and its environs to use for residential, institutional and industrial uses.
      • The land was zoned at that time for agricultural purposes.
      • The council has been called on to increase its commercial rates income by zoning land just outside of the city boundary for commercial development.
      • The premises and grounds are zoned for industrial use.
      • The new centre would be zoned for mixed use to allow residential, retail, educational and community facilities such as a health centre, hotel, restaurants, bars and a post office.
      • The remaining 12 acres are zoned for agriculture.
      • There is land zoned for industry, so the sooner the County Council purchases this land the better.
      • The canal area is zoned for new homes and restaurants, and some redundant cotton mills are being converted into flats.
      • Of course, that designation would be vulnerable to manipulation (the airport is currently zoned as parkland, though it is of course not being used as such).
      • The owners were hard done by following the council decision to zone the land as green area.
  • 2archaic Encircle as or with a band or stripe.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The southeastern horizon is zoned with a mellow uniform band of light.

Phrasal Verbs

  • zone out

    • Fall asleep or lose concentration or consciousness.

      I just zoned out for a moment
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Do they zone out in church and only catch half the sermon or what?
      • He sings Otis Redding's ‘Try a Little Tenderness’ and it's so boring I zone out and my eyeballs fall out.
      • You've been zoning out all day long, what's the problem?
      • It is not the sort of cd I could listen to and just zone out to.
      • In between I collapse back onto the pillow, eyes closed and completely zone out while I wait for the next one.
      • Liz was already sitting there, front row centre among the geeks, yet she seemed to have, once again, zoned out and fallen asleep.
      • We had been studying logarithms, and I had been zoning out.
      • This does more harm than good, as we tend to lose the thread and zone out.
      • Just zoning out in a bath from 20 minutes to an hour can be a wonderful home-spa experience all by itself, relaxing and private.
      • I was zoning out a little from the heat but Jill Sobule's set brought me right back to earth.
      Synonyms
      fall asleep, go to sleep, drop off

Derivatives

  • zonal

  • adjective ˈzəʊnəlˈzoʊn(ə)l
    • Characterized by or relating to a zone or zones.

      zonal maps
      Example sentencesExamples
      • the delineation of zonal boundaries
      • It is for this reason that the method of zonal distribution of forces and assets has come to be practiced in operational training.
      • Meetings were held with and information obtained from district, zonal, and regional officials and several government offices.
      • They analyze reality at the local, zonal, national, and global levels.
  • zonally

  • adverb
    • However, more precise biostratigraphic placement of the rhombiferan beds of the Thornloe must await detailed study of conodonts or other zonally important fossils.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Corals are generally too long-ranged to be useful zonally, although they have been used in Europe in the Early Carboniferous, where A. Vaughan established a zonal scheme in 1905 based on corals and brachiopods.
      • Benitez seems intent on doing things his way, and word from the club's youth academy is that all the junior sides are being coached now to mark zonally rather than the man-to-man system.

Origin

Late Middle English: from French, or from Latin zona 'girdle', from Greek zōnē.

  • Zone is from Greek zōnē, ‘girdle’. It was first used to refer to each of the five belts or encircling regions (differentiated by climate) into which the surface of the earth is divided by the tropics. From this early use, the word came to be applied to various areas defined by certain boundaries or subject to certain restrictions.

Rhymes

alone, atone, Beaune, bemoan, blown, bone, Capone, clone, Cohn, Cologne, condone, cone, co-own, crone, drone, enthrone, flown, foreknown, foreshown, groan, grown, half-tone, home-grown, hone, Joan, known, leone, loan, lone, mephedrone, moan, Mon, mown, ochone, outflown, outgrown, own, phone, pone, prone, Rhône, roan, rone, sewn, shown, Simone, Sloane, Soane, sone, sown, stone, strown, throne, thrown, tone, trombone, Tyrone, unbeknown, undersown, windblown
 
 

Definition of zone in US English:

zone

nounzōnzoʊn
  • 1usually with modifier An area or stretch of land having a particular characteristic, purpose, or use, or subject to particular restrictions.

    a pedestrian zone
    the government has declared the city a disaster zone
    a no-smoking zone
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Heslington gained their first win of the season and moved out of the relegation zone when they beat Londesbrough Park by seven wickets.
    • Last year in those zones an astonishing 166,430 visitor permits were issued.
    • The chain wants to convert the ground floor to what they describe as a traditional ale house and wine bar, with no-smoking zones and a family area.
    • The area in question has now been declared a disaster zone, and provincial funding has been requested to help the afflicted fishermen.
    • The Courthouse car park would be improved, and a pedestrian zone created at the front entrance.
    • Essex Police said the incident had taken place in the main passenger terminal building, near check-in zones E and F, at around 9.40 am today.
    • We had a very large clump of cedar trees just in the fire zone itself.
    • Though it was in the mandatory evacuation zone, fire officials decided removing the animals would be "a logistical nightmare," said the vice president of operations.
    • Once in the security zone you can see some of the damage caused by the bombing.
    • It wants to split the area into parking zones at each end and introduce a road traffic order in the middle to safeguard the loading bay with a larger sign.
    • He had never had a formal driving lesson and was spotted by witnesses doing up to 90 mph in a 30 mph zone minutes before the crash.
    • More than 100,000 people were belatedly evacuated from the zone following the disaster.
    • Thousands of landmines have made patches of the fertile land into no-go zones.
    • Heavy rains are expected in the earthquake zone this weekend.
    • A buffer zone is recommended in which no irrigating is done.
    • A large number come from disrupted family backgrounds, economically or socially deprived families or are children who come from conflict zones themselves.
    • A small strip of land, the demilitarized zone, separates the two sides.
    • The proposed enclosure would stretch from wet sand to dry areas above the tidal zone, but allowed people to walk at the water's edge along the beach.
    • But once inside this military zone the atmosphere is more relaxed and you are able to walk around freely.
    • The village has been divided into different zones and athletes will have a colour-coded map to help them get around.
    Synonyms
    area, sector, section, belt, region, territory, tract, stretch, expanse, district, quarter, precinct, locality, neighbourhood, province, land
    1. 1.1Geography A well-defined region extending around the earth between definite limits, especially between two parallels of latitude.
      a zone of easterly winds
      See also frigid zone, temperate zone, torrid zone
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This diagram is the same as the one above except that the major pressure and wind zones have been replaced by a typical isobaric weather map.
      • Summers in this climatic zone are warm, rainy and uncomfortably humid.
      • The eastern Himalayan region is a high-rainfall zone that yields excessive water in basins during the monsoon.
      • The Atlantic zone receives trade winds and has high rainfall year-round.
      • Located in the temperate monsoon zone, Japan is also strongly influenced by seasonal weather patterns.
    2. 1.2 A range of longitudes where a common standard time is used.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • ‘If we can't run two offices in different locations in the same time zone then we have big problems,’ he said.
      • With the last race having been in Malaysia, and the next in Australia, there's plenty to be said for staying out and getting used to the time zone.
      • We're four miles inside of the central time zone here, in south central Tennessee just north of the Georgia, Alabama border.
      • If you're serious and plan quite a few early mornings, adjust your sleep schedule the same way you adjust to a new time zone.
      • For instance, if you travel to Dallas, the watch will pick up signals from the Dallas radio station and reset itself for the appropriate time zone.
      • Mars will be closest to Earth in 2005 on October 29 or 30, depending on your time zone.
      • As I turn back towards home, my mobile phone beeps into life. A new year greeting sent from a different time zone, halfway across the world.
      • The comet was struck on July forth for the Eastern and Central time zones, but it hit on the third for us in the Rockies and the Western time zone.
      • I'm not sure when the time zone changes, so I'll have to figure that out.
      • Every eight hours, the results of the day's work are forwarded to the team in the next time zone, from Japan to Germany to the USA and back to Japan.
      • The fact that this World Cup is basically being played in our time zone means most soccer fans are able to see a lot more of this event and understand how big it is.
      • Go and look at a map - Portugal is actually, if anything, below and to the left of most of Britain, so it makes complete sense that they are in the same time zone.
      • Smith said the time zone would be attractive to broadcasters, who could schedule games in different timeslots.
      • It was after seven, but Vancouver was in the same time zone, so I called Frank at home.
      • As for jet lag, if you have the luxury, one treatment is to slowly change your awake and sleep times to fit the new time zone.
      • If you take melatonin too early in the day, you may become sleepy before bedtime and it may take you longer to adapt to your new time zone.
      • Fortunately, whether your child is starting school in a new time zone or just down the street, you can help smooth the way.
      • It's hard to live with someone in a different time zone, so I converted for the sake of the relationship.
      • The staging of the World Cup in a different time zone had an adverse effect on newspaper sales, with Sunday papers hit hardest of all.
      • Also, those of us with satellite dishes can watch a different time zone.
    3. 1.3US (in basketball, football, and hockey) a specific area of the court, field, or rink, especially one to be defended by a particular player.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They'd play a box-and-one, a two-two zone with one player guarding Forte man-to-man.
      • On the ice, I had the puck and I was bringing it into the zone when this big player came up next to me and lined up to hit me.
      • The curse seemed to have come to an end as the Rangers cleared their zone and some players piled off the bench to start celebrating.
      • The Wild spent most of their expansion draft picks acquiring players who can cover the defensive zone.
      • In a zone, his defensive problems are masked, and his length makes him effective.
      • McNamara and backcourt partner Edelin make the first decision in the zone: Who defends the ball?
  • 2Botany Zoology
    An encircling band or stripe of distinctive color, texture, or character.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In the cambial zone, at least three patterns of cell differentiation can be distinguished.
    • In addition, plants that are colonized by mycorrhizal fungi have a zone termed the mycorrhizosphere.
    • Like modern frogs, she says, the bones show an inner zone of yellow, fatty marrow, encircled by an outer zone of red marrow.
    • ‘Palmate’ sclerites are situated in the dorsal zone of the animal's body.
    • The basement membrane zone divides the epidermis from the dermis.
    • As the root grows following seed germination, the stomatal zone overlaps with that of the root hairs.
  • 3archaic A belt or girdle worn around a person's body.

    Synonyms
    girdle, sash, strap, cummerbund, waistband, band, girth
verbzōnzoʊn
[with object]
  • 1Divide into or assign to zones.

    the park has been zoned into four distinct bioregions, each with its own ecological identity
    1. 1.1 Divide (a town or piece of land) into areas subject to particular restrictions on development and use.
      towns and cities must have the latitude to zone real property in the best interest of all
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He said a further application would require a material contravention to give zoning authority and added he was surprised by the refusal.
      • However, it was explained at last week's meeting that this figure was arrived at due to current zoning regulations.
      • Clint Eastwood ran for mayor on a platform that promised to prune back the plethora of local rules, regulations, building restrictions and zoning laws.
      • Pay particular attention to zoning in each of the alternatives proposed for your area.
      • Check local regulations and zoning restrictions because some areas may have legally established separation distances.
      • The move was made to restrict zoning, said Stevens, in order to avoid having a retail store set up where it was unwanted.
      • Prescott says he is listening, and, because the urban plan covers zoning bylaws, input can make a difference.
      • Clearly, communities will need to move decisively to change zoning laws and building codes, in order to avoid a repeat of what we have seen.
      • All the indications are that Cherrywood will receive the town centre zoning.
      • I'm sure any zoning plan will be a small sacrifice for the recreational angler to make for the future sustainability of our fish stocks.
      • Stiff zoning laws, even when they're well-intended, result in unintended consequences.
      • There are no regulations, zoning restrictions, fences or white lines to tell you where to go.
      • Cllr Flynn says while Westport Town Councillors won't be zoning this particular piece of land they will be making their opinions felt.
      • The list included concerns voiced by the town planners and architects on land use zoning and floor area ratio.
      • The 140 acres proposed for zoning also includes land adjacent to the Tullamore Road and Brittas Avenue.
      • For new construction, this can be of vital importance, particularly where zoning restricts building height.
      • The local zoning authorities for a long time just outright banned big box stores, stores of over something like 10,000 square feet.
      • First, consider the principle that time, place, and manner restrictions such as zoning generally do not violate the First Amendment.
      • Ms McEvoy said zoning in small villages and towns was essential to ensure controlled, structured and sustainable development.
      • The company will even lobby local government to change zoning regulations in order to get the location they want.
    2. 1.2 Designate (a specific area) for use or development as a particular zone in planning.
      the land is zoned for housing
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The new centre would be zoned for mixed use to allow residential, retail, educational and community facilities such as a health centre, hotel, restaurants, bars and a post office.
      • The owners were hard done by following the council decision to zone the land as green area.
      • The Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority claims the cowboys were illegally using the former warehouse as a stable, a use it wasn't zoned for.
      • Only the 1,000 square feet now operating is zoned for that use.
      • The land was zoned at that time for agricultural purposes.
      • The owners have now had a change of mind and efforts are being made to lease the 8,000 sq. ft property, which is zoned for retail use.
      • The remaining 12 acres are zoned for agriculture.
      • If it zones something for a particular use and nobody wants it, then nothing happens.
      • The council has been called on to increase its commercial rates income by zoning land just outside of the city boundary for commercial development.
      • The purpose of the proposed variation is to zone lands in Tullow and its environs to use for residential, institutional and industrial uses.
      • The Railway Square site is zoned for general business under the 2002 Waterford City Development Plan.
      • The premises and grounds are zoned for industrial use.
      • Listowel town manager Michael McMahon asked councillors to consider zoning a portion of land for the use of discount retailers.
      • Of course, that designation would be vulnerable to manipulation (the airport is currently zoned as parkland, though it is of course not being used as such).
      • Local authorities could then zone it and then sell it on.
      • There is land zoned for industry, so the sooner the County Council purchases this land the better.
      • Since the building is now zoned for residential use, the house can be occupied by only three unrelated people at a time.
      • The property is zoned for residential and part commercial use and is located beside The Elms and Braganza housing estates in Carlow town.
      • The canal area is zoned for new homes and restaurants, and some redundant cotton mills are being converted into flats.
      • But much of the land is former industrial space that couldn't be recycled for new uses without government approval because it is still zoned for manufacturing.
  • 2archaic Encircle as or with a band or stripe.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The southeastern horizon is zoned with a mellow uniform band of light.

Phrasal Verbs

  • zone out

    • Fall asleep or lose concentration or consciousness.

      I just zoned out for a moment
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Do they zone out in church and only catch half the sermon or what?
      • I was zoning out a little from the heat but Jill Sobule's set brought me right back to earth.
      • You've been zoning out all day long, what's the problem?
      • Just zoning out in a bath from 20 minutes to an hour can be a wonderful home-spa experience all by itself, relaxing and private.
      • In between I collapse back onto the pillow, eyes closed and completely zone out while I wait for the next one.
      • It is not the sort of cd I could listen to and just zone out to.
      • He sings Otis Redding's ‘Try a Little Tenderness’ and it's so boring I zone out and my eyeballs fall out.
      • Liz was already sitting there, front row centre among the geeks, yet she seemed to have, once again, zoned out and fallen asleep.
      • This does more harm than good, as we tend to lose the thread and zone out.
      • We had been studying logarithms, and I had been zoning out.
      Synonyms
      fall asleep, go to sleep, drop off

Origin

Late Middle English: from French, or from Latin zona ‘girdle’, from Greek zōnē.

 
 
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