arena
/əˈriːnə/ (bre, ipa) · /əˈriːnə/ (ame, ipa) · /ə-ˈrē-nə/ (ame, mw)
arena — 名詞
1. a wide open space, usually with rows of seats wrapping around it, where crowds g
競技場
舉辦比賽或表演、四周設座位的大型場地
a wide open space, usually with rows of seats wrapping around it, where crowds gather to watch sports matches, concerts, or other live shows.
Fans queued for hours outside the arena before the basketball final began.
球迷在籃球決賽開打前,在競技場外排了好幾個小時。
outside the + arena (location preposition)
Taylor Swift played to twenty thousand fans at the new arena in Tokyo.
泰勒絲在東京新落成的體育館對著兩萬名歌迷演出。
play / perform at the arena (concert venue)
The arena was packed with families waving flags and eating popcorn.
整座競技場擠滿了揮舞旗幟、吃著爆米花的家庭觀眾。
Workers swept the dirt floor of the arena before the rodeo riders entered.
工作人員在牛仔競技選手進場前,把競技場的泥土地清掃乾淨。
Marco bought tickets in the upper level of the arena for his daughter's birthday.
馬可幫女兒慶生,買了體育館上層的座位票。
文法句型
a/an + arena
in/at the arena
用法筆記
Often paired with the type of event held inside (sports arena, concert arena, indoor arena). Capacity is usually larger than a stadium's indoor hall but smaller than an open-air stadium.
常見錯誤
2. a public field of work or debate where rival people, parties, or ideas openly co
領域;舞台
公開競爭或角力的特定領域
a public field of work or debate where rival people, parties, or ideas openly compete for influence — used as a metaphor drawn from gladiator fighting.
After thirty years in the political arena, Senator Diaz still loved a heated debate.
迪亞茲參議員在政治舞台上打滾三十年,至今仍熱愛激烈辯論。
the political arena (fixed phrase)
Young coders are pushing into the arena of artificial intelligence with bold new tools.
年輕的程式設計師正帶著大膽的新工具,闖進人工智慧的領域。
the arena of + noun (sphere of activity)
China and the United States compete fiercely in the global trade arena.
中美兩國在全球貿易舞台上激烈競爭。
Greta Thunberg stepped into the public arena at the age of fifteen.
童貝里十五歲就踏入公共議題的舞台。
The courtroom became an arena where two top lawyers fought over the will.
法庭成了兩位頂尖律師為遺囑交鋒的角力場。
文法句型
the + arena + of + noun
in the [adj] arena
用法筆記
Typically preceded by an adjective naming the field (political, public, global, business, legal) or by 'of' plus a topic noun. Strongly suggests rivalry or open contest, so avoid this sense for quiet, cooperative work.