mankind
/mænˈkaɪnd/ (bre, ipa) · /mænˈkaɪnd/ (ame, ipa)
mankind — 名詞
1. all human beings, past and present, thought of together as one group or species
人類
所有男性與女性人類的總稱
all human beings, past and present, thought of together as one group or species
Some historians argue that the discovery of fire changed the course of mankind forever.
有些歷史學家主張,火的發現永遠改變了人類的發展歷程。
changed the course of — significant historical impact
Faisal believes that exploring other planets is the greatest achievement of mankind.
Faisal 認為探索其他行星是人類最偉大的成就。
Before 1500, Europeans did not know that half of mankind lived across the ocean.
在西元1500年以前,歐洲人不知道有半數人類生活在海洋的另一端。
The old museum held records of every major invention in the history of mankind.
那間老舊的博物館收藏著人類歷史上每一項重大發明的記錄。
Jisoo's grandfather often said that kindness is the finest quality of mankind.
Jisoo 的祖父常說,仁慈是人類最可貴的特質。
- humanity
the most common modern alternative; feels broader and more inclusive than 'mankind'
- humankind
a deliberately gender-neutral form that avoids the 'man' element entirely
- the human race
more concrete and everyday in tone; often used in spoken English
- people
less formal and narrower in scope; refers to individuals rather than the whole species
文法句型
mankind as a collective group
the whole of mankind
用法筆記
Uncountable noun — never used with 'a' or 'an' and never used in the plural. In modern writing, 'humankind' or 'humanity' is sometimes preferred to avoid the appearance of excluding women that the word 'man' can create.