occupation

occupation — noun

1. the work that someone does to earn a living, usually written on forms next to yo

1.名詞A2
釋義

the work that someone does to earn a living, usually written on forms next to your name and address.

例句

Please write your name, age, and occupation on the green form.

form-filling context: 'name, age, and occupation'

Maya's occupation is nurse, and she works at the children's hospital in Taipei.

pattern: someone's occupation is [job]

同義詞
  • job

    more everyday and conversational; 'occupation' sounds more formal.

  • profession

    suggests work needing long training or qualifications, like law or medicine.

  • career

    covers a whole working life, not just current paid work.

文法句型

by occupation

occupation as [job title]

用法筆記

Often appears on forms and official documents where 'job' would feel too casual. Frequently used with 'by' to state someone's profession (a doctor by occupation).

常見錯誤

My occupation is to teach English.
My occupation is teaching English.
💡use a noun or -ing form after 'is', not 'to' + verb.

2. something you do to fill your free time and keep yourself busy, especially when

2.名詞C1
釋義

something you do to fill your free time and keep yourself busy, especially when it is not your paid work.

例句

Painting watercolours has been Grandma's favourite occupation since she retired.

collocation: favourite occupation

Reading detective novels is a pleasant occupation for a rainy Sunday afternoon.

pattern: [activity] is a [adjective] occupation

同義詞
  • pastime

    near synonym; emphasises pleasure rather than just filling time.

  • hobby

    more everyday word; suggests a regular interest pursued seriously.

  • pursuit

    more formal; often used for activities needing skill or effort.

文法句型

a [adjective] occupation

用法筆記

Subject is usually an activity or -ing form, not a person. Often appears with adjectives showing how the activity feels (pleasant, quiet, harmless, favourite). Distinguish from sense 1: this sense is unpaid and chosen for enjoyment.

常見錯誤

My occupation is reading.' (when meaning a hobby)
Reading is my favourite occupation.
💡sense 2 typically puts the activity in the subject position.

3. the situation where the army of one country has entered another country and is r

3.名詞C2
釋義

the situation where the army of one country has entered another country and is ruling it by force.

例句

France lived under German occupation for four long years during the Second World War.

fixed phrase: 'under occupation'

The Roman occupation of Britain lasted nearly four centuries before the soldiers withdrew.

pattern: occupation of [place]

同義詞
  • invasion

    stresses the moment of entering by force; occupation is the longer state that follows.

  • conquest

    more historical; emphasises winning territory through war.

反義詞
  • liberation

    the act of freeing a place from foreign military control.

  • withdrawal

    the moment foreign troops leave the occupied area.

文法句型

under occupation

occupation of [place]

用法筆記

Almost always uncountable and usually preceded by 'the' or a defining adjective (the German occupation, foreign occupation). Frequently followed by 'of' + place name. Distinguish from sense 4: this sense involves military force and a hostile takeover, not peaceful living.

常見錯誤

There was an occupation in Korea.
Korea was under occupation during this period.
💡'under occupation' is the natural set phrase; using 'an' makes it sound like sense 1.

4. the formal state of someone holding, residing in, or making use of a house, flat

4.名詞C2
釋義

the formal state of someone holding, residing in, or making use of a house, flat, or plot of land, especially as set out in a contract or property record.

例句

The new flats will be ready for occupation by tenants in early September.

fixed phrase: 'ready for occupation'

The old farmhouse has been in continuous occupation by the same family for six generations.

collocation: continuous occupation

同義詞
  • occupancy

    very close in meaning; preferred in hotel and building-capacity contexts.

  • tenancy

    narrower; refers specifically to renting under a contract.

  • residence

    stresses the home aspect; less about the legal right to use.

反義詞
  • vacancy

    the state of a property being empty and unused.

文法句型

occupation of [building]

ready for occupation

用法筆記

Mainly appears in legal, rental, or estate-agent writing. Subject is usually a building, flat, or piece of land rather than a country. Distinguish from sense 3: no military force is involved; the focus is peaceful, often paid, residence or use.

常見錯誤

I started my occupation of the apartment last week.' (in casual speech)
I moved into the apartment last week.
💡sense 4 is formal; use 'move in' in everyday talk.