territory

/ˈterətri/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈterətɔːri/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈter-ə-ˌtȯr-ē/ (ame, mw)

territory — noun

  • territorysingular
  • territoriesplural

1. the land or waters belonging to a nation, governed by its laws and international

1.名詞B1
釋義

the land or waters belonging to a nation, governed by its laws and internationally recognised as part of its sovereign domain.

例句

The two countries signed a treaty to divide the territory along the river.

treaty + territory — political division

Isabela's family fled the region when the territory came under enemy control.

同義詞
  • domain

    more formal, can be figurative; 'the domain of the king'

  • region

    neutral geographical area without implying political control

  • zone

    suggests a designated purpose or character rather than sovereignty

反義詞

文法句型

possessive + territory

adjective + territory

用法筆記

Frequently paired with adjectives naming the political status (sovereign territory, occupied territory, disputed territory) or with a country name as a modifier (Canadian territory, Spanish territory).

常見錯誤

The Sahara Desert is a territory of several countries.
The Sahara Desert spans the territory of several countries.
💡territory implies formal governmental control; for natural features, use 'spans the territory of' or 'lies within.'
He bought a territory of land to build a house.
He bought a plot of land to build a house.
💡territory is too political and large-scale for a private property purchase.

2. a political region within a larger nation that runs its own local affairs but do

2.名詞B2
釋義

a political region within a larger nation that runs its own local affairs but does not have the full governing power that a state enjoys — for example, Puerto Rico, Guam, or the Northern Territory of Australia.

例句

Puerto Rico, a US territory, has its own government but no voting members in Congress.

territory as political subunit

The territory elects its own governor, though foreign policy is handled by the national government.

同義詞
  • dependency

    more formal, emphasises reliance on a governing power

  • colony

    historical term for a territory settled by people from another country

  • protectorate

    a state controlled and protected by another, with more autonomy than a colony

反義詞

文法句型

[country] + territory

name of + territory

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 1 — sense 2 refers to a non-sovereign region whose external affairs are managed by a larger country, whereas sense 1 describes sovereign land that a country controls as its own.

常見錯誤

Scotland is a territory of the United Kingdom.
Scotland is a constituent country of the United Kingdom.
💡some regions are not called 'territories' even if they lack full sovereignty; check the official political term.

❌ 'Taiwan is a territory of China.' — This statement is politically charged and contested; learners should understand that territory has specific legal meanings that may not match all political claims.

3. a space that an animal claims for itself, using it regularly and driving away in

3.名詞B1
釋義

a space that an animal claims for itself, using it regularly and driving away intruders — also used figuratively for a person's claimed personal space like a desk or room.

例句

Each night the male lion patrols his territory and roars to warn other animals away.

Hamza's dog barked furiously whenever another dog entered its territory.

同義詞
  • domain

    broader, can be literal or figurative; less aggressive than territory

  • turf

    informal, especially in sports or street contexts

  • patch

    informal British English, especially for animals or small personal areas

反義詞

文法句型

possessive + territory

mark/defend/patrol + possessive + territory

用法筆記

Commonly used with verbs of defence (defend, guard, patrol, protect) and marking (mark, claim, establish). The human sense is usually informal and applies to spaces like a desk, a room, or a seat.

常見錯誤

This kitchen is my territory — I do all the cooking.
This kitchen is my domain
💡I do all the cooking.' — 'territory' for human personal space has a defensive, possessive tone; 'domain' sounds more natural for claiming a role or area.
The cat considers the whole house its territory.
The cat considers the whole house its territory because it sleeps and eats there.
💡'territory' for domestic animals is acceptable but adding a reason clarifies the claim.

4. a subject, type of knowledge, or area of interest that someone is familiar with,

4.名詞B2
釋義

a subject, type of knowledge, or area of interest that someone is familiar with, has studied, or has experience in — often used metaphorically to describe what a person does or does not know well.

例句

Ancient Roman architecture is not my territory, so I cannot help you with that question.

When the discussion moved into legal territory, Kabir asked to speak with a lawyer.

into [adj] territory — metaphorical pattern

同義詞
  • field

    the most natural word for a subject of study or work

  • area

    broader and more general than territory for knowledge domains

  • domain

    more formal, emphasises ownership of a knowledge area

反義詞

文法句型

[adjective] + territory

not [possessive] + territory

into + [adjective] + territory

用法筆記

Often found in fixed phrases with adjectives: familiar territory, uncharted territory, dangerous territory. Most natural in negative constructions ('not my territory') or directional metaphors ('moving into… territory'). Less natural as a simple positive claim ('My territory is physics'). The fixed phrase 'goes with the territory' means something is an unavoidable part of a situation.

常見錯誤

Physics is my territory — I teach it at the university.
Physics is my field
💡I teach it at the university.' — 'territory' in positive claims about expertise sounds unnatural; use 'field' or 'area' instead.
Cooking is new territory for me because I never tried it before.
Cooking is new territory for me
💡I have never tried it before.' — This is actually acceptable, but 'unfamiliar territory' is the more common fixed phrase.

5. a specific geographic area or region that a person or team is responsible for co

5.名詞B2
釋義

a specific geographic area or region that a person or team is responsible for covering in their job — for example, a sales territory or a police officer's patrol area.

例句

Liam's sales territory covers the entire west coast from Seattle to San Diego.

sales territory — business compound noun

Each police officer is assigned a specific territory to patrol during their shift.

同義詞
  • beat

    specifically a police officer's regular patrol route or area

  • district

    an administrative area, often with clearly drawn boundaries

  • patch

    informal British English for someone's assigned area of responsibility

  • route

    especially for delivery or service workers who travel

文法句型

possessive + territory

sales/service/assigned + territory

用法筆記

Most common in sales, policing, and service-industry contexts. The noun 'sales representative' or 'officer' is often the subject. A territory can be defined by geography, customer type, or both.

常見錯誤

My territory at the restaurant is serving tables.
My section at the restaurant is serving tables.
💡'territory' for job responsibility implies a physical geographic area, not a type of task.
The IT support team has a territory of user problems.
The IT support team handles a range of user problems.
💡'territory' for job duties works only when those duties are linked to a physical area.