Table of Contents
1. football
noun. ['ˈfʊtˌbɔl'] any of various games played with a ball (round or oval) in which two teams try to kick or carry or propel the ball into each other's goal.
Synonyms
- American football
- rugby
- association football
- contact sport
- football game
- half
- professional football
- soccer
- rugger
- American football game
- rugby football
Antonyms
- whole
- unwind
Featured Games
Rhymes with Football Field
- unconcealed
- satterfield
- congealed
- concealed
- unsealed
- revealed
- resealed
- repealed
- highyield
- cofield
- wheeled
- appealed
- afield
- yield
- wield
- weild
- shield
- sealed
- schield
- reeled
- peeled
- nield
- neild
- neeld
- heeled
- healed
- heald
- feild
2. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] a piece of land cleared of trees and usually enclosed.
Synonyms
- campus
- piece of ground
- firebreak
- fireguard
- grainfield
- lawn
- rice paddy
- grounds
- tract
- paddy
- parcel of land
- curtilage
- paddy field
- yard
- grain field
- parcel
Antonyms
- cubic
- erect
- thick
- indirectly
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
3. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] a region where a battle is being (or has been) fought.
Synonyms
- field of battle
- piece of ground
- battlefront
- front line
- tract
- battleground
- parcel of land
- front
- field of honor
- sector
- battlefield
- parcel
Antonyms
- roughen
- disconnect
- unfasten
- figure
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
4. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] somewhere (away from a studio or office or library or laboratory) where practical work is done or data is collected.
Antonyms
- stimulating
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
5. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] a branch of knowledge.
Synonyms
- technology
- frontier
- graphology
- discipline
- humanities
- knowledge base
- engineering
- communication theory
- humanistic discipline
- numerology
- occultism
- major
- ology
- futuristics
- theology
- communications
- arts
- allometry
- applied science
- domain
- subject area
- futurology
- military science
- field of study
- study
- protology
- liberal arts
- divinity
- escapology
- science
- genealogy
- engineering science
- subject field
- scientific discipline
- bailiwick
- subject
- knowledge domain
- theogony
- architecture
Antonyms
- RISC
- CISC
- infield
- outfield
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
6. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] the space around a radiating body within which its electromagnetic oscillations can exert force on another similar body not in contact with it.
Synonyms
- gravitational field
- magnetic flux
- force field
- radiation field
- electric field
- field of force
- magnetic field
- flux
Antonyms
- leave
- undock
- masculine
- antapex
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
7. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] a piece of land prepared for playing a game.
Synonyms
- scene of action
- athletic field
- parcel of land
- bowling green
- piece of land
- piece of ground
- playing area
- playing field
- palaestra
- football field
- palestra
- diamond
- tract
- arena
- ball field
- bowl
- sports stadium
- court
- stadium
- gridiron
- midfield
- parcel
Antonyms
- inclined
- vertical
- effervescent
- cheer
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
8. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] a particular environment or walk of life.
Synonyms
- political sphere
- land
- political arena
- distaff
- kingdom
- sphere
- area
- arena
- front
- orbit
- realm
- preserve
- responsibility
- environment
- province
- domain
Antonyms
- nadir
- rear
- last
- aft
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
9. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] a particular kind of commercial enterprise.
Synonyms
- business enterprise
- commercial enterprise
- business
- line of business
Antonyms
- indiscipline
- Romanticism
- classicism
- minor
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
10. field
noun. ['ˈfiːld'] extensive tract of level open land.
Synonyms
- moorland
- tundra
- ground
- peneplane
- flat
- plain
- solid ground
- earth
- flood plain
- land
- peneplain
- dry land
- steppe
- champaign
- moor
- floodplain
- llano
- snowfield
Antonyms
- impure
- patterned
- indirect
- attractive
Etymology
- field (Middle English (1100-1500))
Sentences with football-field
1. Noun Phrase
Create a scale model on a football field of the solar system using different colored toy balls for the planets and an orange for the sun.
2. Noun Phrase
The Tampa Bay Rays play baseball in St. Petersburg, but Yankees fans will find spring training games in central Tampa, right across the street from the Bucs football field.
3. Noun Phrase
Decorating for the Homecoming game at the football field is not only an ideal way to show school spirit, but also makes the game stand out from other weekly showdowns.