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单词 no man's land
释义

Definition of no man's land in English:

no man's land

noun
mass noun
  • 1Disputed ground between the front lines or trenches of two opposing armies.

    enemy soldiers facing you across no man's land
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Meanwhile, the enemies on no-man's-land shake hands again and shut their respective gates with ferocious movements.
    • At 5am on Christmas Day, British and German troops walk across no-man's-land, talking and exchanging souvenirs.
    • On 15 September 1916, at the Battle of the Somme, after horrific infantry losses, forty-nine Mark I tanks were sent in to support infantry attacks across no-man's-land.
    • And the no-man's-land between the two parties is where presidential contests are won and lost.
    • It thus appears to lie in what Stankov has called the no-man's-land between personality and intelligence.
    • As a result, many emerging companies found themselves in a kind of no-man's-land when it came to financing their future growth.
    • To the north, Americans and Kurdish fighters took up positions in the no-man's-land south of the Kurdish autonomous region.
    • He was awarded the Military Cross after fearlessly walking into no-man's-land between the opposing troops to comfort wounded and dying soldiers.
    • As a result of all this, there is really no word left to define that no-man's-land between youth and age.
    • Muhammad and Tahseen had helped me explore the back roads and smugglers' routes in the no-man's-land surrounding government-controlled Kirkuk.
    • For about 350 of those kilometers inside Iraq, it's complete no-man's-land.
    • Now, everything seems transitional - we're in a sort of no-man's-land between the object and the information.
    • A shell erupted overhead, spraying no-man's-land with color and light, and Grundling saw what the sound was.
    • Before the end of the war, however, the ineffectiveness of cavalry units in modern warfare had been realised and he was given a new, even more dangerous role - as a scout in no-man's-land.
    • The most critical hour of your workday is 3 o'clock, that nutritional no-man's-land between lunch and dinner when your head starts to nod and your eyelids start clamping to your eyes.
    1. 1.1 An indeterminate or undefined place or state.
      the no man's land between the two parties is where presidential contests are won and lost
      an unmapped no man's land between the traditional command economy and the market
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Pet cloning exists in a regulatory no man's land.
      • As the UK's fifth biggest bank, it appears to be caught in no man's land - not small enough to be a niche banker but not quite big enough to compete with the market leaders on an equal footing either.
      • We are left in a moral no man's land, unable to determine what's sacred.
      • Part surreal satire on human domesticity, part gentle study of male loneliness, Bent Hamer's engaging little movie occupies a strange no man's land between little-known history and pure Pythonesque looniness.
      • He is a citizen without a country, trapped in a no man's land of fast food outlets and endless shopping opportunities.
      • Right now, we are in no man's land, politically.
      • Few bands have traversed the no man's land between art and commerce quite like The Dears.
      • The band's minimalist attitude occasionally strands them in an electro no man's land.
      • The period between Christmas and New Year is a strange form of no man's land where we muse and watch the rain fall.
      • After languishing in an anti-fashion no man's land for a good 10 years, the cocktail enjoyed a renaissance in the early Nineties.
      • Located somewhere in the no man's land between popular and so-called serious music, the digital sound improvisations of Errorsmith are performed on self-built digital instruments.
      • The Tories risked being caught in political no man's land.
      • His request was rejected, and he found himself in a bizarre no man's land: exiled from home and barred from entering France.
      • The BMA yesterday called on the British Government to put more money into services which specifically target adolescents, which it said were stuck in a no man's land between child and adult health services.
      • Devoted to exploring the experience of exile, Expulsion strives to inhabit "the no man's land between dreaming and waking life, that seemingly eternal moment where regret, nostalgia and desire meet."
      • These men ended up in a bureaucratic no man's land, coming under neither the regulations regarding prisoners nor those about soldiers.
      • Remix collections rarely satisfy fully, usually falling into a no man's land which fans of the original artists have little interest in exploring.
      Synonyms
      oblivion, void, non-existence, neither heaven nor hell
    2. 1.2count noun A piece of unowned land or wasteland.
      between Riverside Drive and Central Park West was a no man's land, a zone of welfare tenements
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This is the generally scummy and rat-infested old mall in the terrifyingly sprawling no-man's-land of Tuscaloosa.
      • In the late 1990s, for instance, developer Larry Silverstein built an apartment tower on 42nd Street, near the Lincoln Tunnel - previously a residential no-man's-land.
      • Beyond the checkpost at Thal, a tiny, fly-blown, windblown nowhere of a village on the edge of Pakistan's tribal areas, is a no-man's-land where the only law is that of the gun and the tribe.
      • The perimeter around the airport used to be a no-man's-land; anyone on the property was immediately suspicious.
      • Potsdamer Platz, once a no-man's-land across which concrete barriers and barbed wire stretched, now has a McDonald's and Starbucks.
      • And I don't want the world to become a barren no-man's-land run by roaches.
      Synonyms
      wasteland, neglected area, abandoned area, no-man's-land

Origin

Middle English: originally the name of a plot of ground lying outside the north wall of the city of London, the site of a place of execution.

Definition of no man's land in US English:

no man's land

nounˈnō ˌmanz ˌlandˈnoʊ ˌmænz ˌlænd
  • 1Disputed ground between the front lines or trenches of two opposing armies.

    enemy soldiers facing you across no man's land
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As a result of all this, there is really no word left to define that no-man's-land between youth and age.
    • Meanwhile, the enemies on no-man's-land shake hands again and shut their respective gates with ferocious movements.
    • Muhammad and Tahseen had helped me explore the back roads and smugglers' routes in the no-man's-land surrounding government-controlled Kirkuk.
    • Now, everything seems transitional - we're in a sort of no-man's-land between the object and the information.
    • At 5am on Christmas Day, British and German troops walk across no-man's-land, talking and exchanging souvenirs.
    • As a result, many emerging companies found themselves in a kind of no-man's-land when it came to financing their future growth.
    • On 15 September 1916, at the Battle of the Somme, after horrific infantry losses, forty-nine Mark I tanks were sent in to support infantry attacks across no-man's-land.
    • A shell erupted overhead, spraying no-man's-land with color and light, and Grundling saw what the sound was.
    • To the north, Americans and Kurdish fighters took up positions in the no-man's-land south of the Kurdish autonomous region.
    • He was awarded the Military Cross after fearlessly walking into no-man's-land between the opposing troops to comfort wounded and dying soldiers.
    • Before the end of the war, however, the ineffectiveness of cavalry units in modern warfare had been realised and he was given a new, even more dangerous role - as a scout in no-man's-land.
    • It thus appears to lie in what Stankov has called the no-man's-land between personality and intelligence.
    • And the no-man's-land between the two parties is where presidential contests are won and lost.
    • The most critical hour of your workday is 3 o'clock, that nutritional no-man's-land between lunch and dinner when your head starts to nod and your eyelids start clamping to your eyes.
    • For about 350 of those kilometers inside Iraq, it's complete no-man's-land.
    1. 1.1 An indeterminate or undefined place or state.
      the no man's land between the two parties is where presidential contests are won and lost
      an unmapped no man's land between the traditional command economy and the market
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Few bands have traversed the no man's land between art and commerce quite like The Dears.
      • After languishing in an anti-fashion no man's land for a good 10 years, the cocktail enjoyed a renaissance in the early Nineties.
      • Remix collections rarely satisfy fully, usually falling into a no man's land which fans of the original artists have little interest in exploring.
      • Part surreal satire on human domesticity, part gentle study of male loneliness, Bent Hamer's engaging little movie occupies a strange no man's land between little-known history and pure Pythonesque looniness.
      • The band's minimalist attitude occasionally strands them in an electro no man's land.
      • Devoted to exploring the experience of exile, Expulsion strives to inhabit "the no man's land between dreaming and waking life, that seemingly eternal moment where regret, nostalgia and desire meet."
      • He is a citizen without a country, trapped in a no man's land of fast food outlets and endless shopping opportunities.
      • The period between Christmas and New Year is a strange form of no man's land where we muse and watch the rain fall.
      • The BMA yesterday called on the British Government to put more money into services which specifically target adolescents, which it said were stuck in a no man's land between child and adult health services.
      • Located somewhere in the no man's land between popular and so-called serious music, the digital sound improvisations of Errorsmith are performed on self-built digital instruments.
      • These men ended up in a bureaucratic no man's land, coming under neither the regulations regarding prisoners nor those about soldiers.
      • His request was rejected, and he found himself in a bizarre no man's land: exiled from home and barred from entering France.
      • As the UK's fifth biggest bank, it appears to be caught in no man's land - not small enough to be a niche banker but not quite big enough to compete with the market leaders on an equal footing either.
      • The Tories risked being caught in political no man's land.
      • Pet cloning exists in a regulatory no man's land.
      • We are left in a moral no man's land, unable to determine what's sacred.
      • Right now, we are in no man's land, politically.
      Synonyms
      oblivion, void, non-existence, neither heaven nor hell
    2. 1.2 Land or area that is unowned, uninhabited, or undesirable.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Potsdamer Platz, once a no-man's-land across which concrete barriers and barbed wire stretched, now has a McDonald's and Starbucks.
      • In the late 1990s, for instance, developer Larry Silverstein built an apartment tower on 42nd Street, near the Lincoln Tunnel - previously a residential no-man's-land.
      • This is the generally scummy and rat-infested old mall in the terrifyingly sprawling no-man's-land of Tuscaloosa.
      • The perimeter around the airport used to be a no-man's-land; anyone on the property was immediately suspicious.
      • Beyond the checkpost at Thal, a tiny, fly-blown, windblown nowhere of a village on the edge of Pakistan's tribal areas, is a no-man's-land where the only law is that of the gun and the tribe.
      • And I don't want the world to become a barren no-man's-land run by roaches.
      Synonyms
      wasteland, neglected area, abandoned area, no-man's-land

Origin

Middle English: originally the name of a plot of ground lying outside the north wall of the city of London, the site of a place of execution.

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更新时间:2024/11/10 1:34:37