inhabitation
inhabitation — 名詞
1. the state or activity of people or animals making their home in a location for a
居住
人或動物長期在某地居住的狀態或過程
the state or activity of people or animals making their home in a location for a sustained period
The remote island showed no signs of human inhabitation when the first explorers arrived.
首批探險家抵達時,這座偏遠島嶼沒有任何人類居住的跡象。
uncountable noun; pattern: signs of human inhabitation
Naoko studied the traces of ancient inhabitation left along the river valley by early settlers.
Naoko 研究了早期移民沿河岸留下的遠古居住痕跡。
pattern: traces/ancient inhabitation
Archaeologists found evidence of continuous inhabitation at the cave site spanning over three thousand years.
考古學家在該洞穴遺址發現了跨越三千多年的持續居住證據。
Soraya's research examined bird inhabitation patterns in the coastal forests of eastern Taiwan.
Soraya 的研究探討了臺灣東部海岸森林的鳥類居住模式。
Extreme cold makes winter inhabitation of the mountain cabin very challenging for hikers.
嚴寒使得登山者在冬季期間很難住在山中小屋。
- occupancy
more legal/formal, typically refers to use of a building rather than long-term dwelling
- residence
commonly used for human living arrangements; more everyday than 'inhabitation'
- habitation
shorter, slightly less formal, often interchangeable but broader in meaning
- vacancy
state of being empty or unoccupied
- abandonment
act of leaving a place with no intention of returning
用法筆記
Frequently used in formal, academic, or archaeological contexts. Often paired with adjectives such as 'continuous', 'ancient', 'human', or 'permanent' to specify duration or origin.