patch

/pætʃ/ (bre, ipa) · /pætʃ/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈpach/ (ame, mw)

patch — noun

1. a small part of a place or surface that stands out because it looks or feels dif

1.名詞C1
釋義

a small part of a place or surface that stands out because it looks or feels different from what is around it

例句

A patch of ice still covered the road near the bridge.

patch of + noun

Sunlight made bright patches on the classroom wall after noon.

plural patches for marks of light

同義詞
  • spot

    more everyday and often smaller

  • area

    broader and less focused on contrast

  • section

    more neutral and often used for larger parts

文法句型

a patch of ice

a patch of grass

bright patches on a wall

用法筆記

Usually appears in patterns like a patch of grass, ice, or sunlight. Distinguish from noun/3, which is a separate piece added to repair something.

2. the part of a town or region that someone regularly works in and knows well

2.名詞C2
釋義

the part of a town or region that someone regularly works in and knows well

例句

Officer Chen drove back to his patch for the morning market patrol.

possessive: his patch

The sales team split the city into patches for new workers.

split a city into patches

同義詞
  • district

    more formal and official

  • territory

    broader and can sound competitive in business use

  • beat

    mainly used for a police officer's usual area

文法句型

his patch

work in your patch

know your patch well

用法筆記

Most often appears as your, his, or her patch. Common for police, nurses, sales workers, and others who cover a fixed local area.

3. a bit of cloth, rubber, or similar material fixed over damage to cover it or mak

3.名詞B2
釋義

a bit of cloth, rubber, or similar material fixed over damage to cover it or make it stronger

例句

Grandma sewed a blue patch over the hole in my jeans.

patch over a hole

Mila sewed a patch onto her torn jacket elbow after dinner.

patch onto + object

同義詞
  • covering

    broader and does not always suggest repair

  • reinforcement

    focuses more on making a weak part stronger

  • bandage

    used mainly for injuries on the body, not general objects

文法句型

a patch over a hole

sew a patch onto something

put a patch on a tire

用法筆記

Used when one small weak place is covered or strengthened. Distinguish from noun/1, where patch means the different-looking area itself, not a separate added piece.

常見錯誤

My jeans need patch.
My jeans need a patch.
💡This noun is countable and normally needs an article in the singular.

4. a cloth sign sewn onto clothing to show a group, job, rank, or name

4.名詞B2
釋義

a cloth sign sewn onto clothing to show a group, job, rank, or name

例句

A flag patch was sewn onto Maya's scout shirt last week.

collocation: flag patch

The pilot's patch showed his name above the left pocket.

同義詞
  • badge

    the usual everyday word, though badges can also be metal

  • emblem

    stresses the symbol or design more than the cloth piece

  • insignia

    more formal and often used for rank or official identity

文法句型

a flag patch

shoulder patch

sew a patch onto a shirt

用法筆記

Often used for uniforms, scout groups, and event souvenirs. Distinguish from noun/3, where the piece is meant to repair damage.

5. a small sticky piece put on your skin to let medicine enter the body slowly

5.名詞C1
釋義

a small sticky piece put on your skin to let medicine enter the body slowly

例句

Dad put a nicotine patch on his arm before work.

collocation: nicotine patch

The nurse changed the pain patch after Maria's surgery.

同義詞

文法句型

a nicotine patch

wear a patch on your skin

change the patch

用法筆記

The patch stays on the skin for a period of time while the medicine enters the body slowly. Often named by the treatment, such as nicotine patch or pain patch.

常見錯誤

I wore a patch medicine on my arm.
I wore a medicine patch on my arm.
💡Patch is the main noun; the medicine word usually comes before it.

6. a covering worn over one eye, usually to protect it while it heals or is treated

6.名詞B2
釋義

a covering worn over one eye, usually to protect it while it heals or is treated

例句

After the accident, Leo wore a black patch over one eye.

patch over one eye

The doctor asked Emma to keep the patch on until morning.

同義詞
  • eyepatch

    the single-word form with the same meaning

  • eye cover

    a plain descriptive phrase

  • shield

    broader and can refer to stronger protective equipment

文法句型

wear a patch over one eye

keep the patch on

eye patch

用法筆記

Can refer to a medical covering or the costume item that copies it. In medical use, it is often used with keep on, wear, or remove.

7. a small software update installed to fix a problem or help a program run better

7.名詞B2
釋義

a small software update installed to fix a problem or help a program run better

例句

The racing game needs a patch before Friday's online tournament starts.

Our IT team installed the security patch during lunch.

collocation: security patch

同義詞
  • update

    broader and can include many changes, not only fixes

  • hotfix

    a fast fix released for an urgent problem

  • bug fix

    focuses only on correcting an error

文法句型

install a patch

download a patch

security patch

用法筆記

Usually refers to a small corrective update, not a full new version of a program. Common with security, bug, install, release, and download.

常見錯誤

The company sent a patch and I updated all new features.
The company sent a patch to fix the bug.
💡A patch is usually a limited fix, not a full feature release.

8. a stretch of time when life, work, or a relationship is going badly

8.名詞B2
釋義

a stretch of time when life, work, or a relationship is going badly

例句

After losing his job, Ben went through a rough patch.

go through a rough patch

Our marriage hit a bad patch when we moved abroad.

hit a bad patch

同義詞
  • spell

    a general word for a period of time

  • phase

    can sound more neutral and less emotional

  • stretch

    informal and often stresses length

文法句型

go through a rough patch

hit a bad patch

a difficult patch

用法筆記

Most often appears with words like rough, bad, hard, or difficult. Common verbs are go through, hit, have, and get past.

常見錯誤

I passed a bad patch last year.
I went through a bad patch last year.
💡This sense commonly appears with go through, not pass.

patch — verb