>>Note: Etymology: Middle English feld, fild, field, from Old English feld; akin to Old Frisian, Old Saxon, & Old High German feld field, Old English fold earth, Old Saxon folda, Old Norse fold; akin to Old English flor floor -- more at floor |
| Field (mathematics), set of elements that can be operated on according to rules that satisfy certain properties. |
| Field (Sports), an athletic or sports area or space |
| baseball, cricket, field hockey, football, soccer, polo... |
| Field (heraldry), the field, or background, of an escutcheon may be of two or more tinctures, divided by one or more partition lines. |
| the background of a shield |
| Field (physics), a continuously distributed entity in space that accounts for actions at a distance |
| Field (geography), with a definition similar to that of physics but in a different context and using unique models and methods |
| the place where a battle is fought |
| a land area free of woodland, cities, and towns |
| a large unbroken expanse of sea ice |
| Field (agriculture), an area of land used to cultivate crops for agricultural purposes |
| Visual field or field of view, the area visible from a point of view (it can be a camera or an eye) |
| Field of study, a branch of knowledge |
| Depth of field, in photography, the distance in front of and beyond the subject that appears to be in focus |
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