You searched for: “areas
area (s) (noun), areas (pl)
The measurement or extent of a two-dimensional surface enclosed within a boundary: The islands cover an area of 7,000 square kilometers.

Jim's geometry teacher told the students to assess the area of a triangle.

This entry is located in the following unit: Measurements and Mathematics Terms (page 2)
(electricity has become one of the most significant areas of study in the world)
(medical professionals and scientists who specialize in designated areas of medical care)
(terms appearing in some "scientific" areas from about 2000 B.C. to 1799 A.D.)
(terms appearing in some "scientific" areas from about 1800 A.D. to 1899 A.D.)
Word Entries containing the term: “areas
astronomical area of study (s) (noun phrase), astronomical areas of study (pl)
Fields of study include: astrophysics, celestial mechanics, and cosmology.

Astronomy is considered by some to be the oldest recorded science. This concept is based on records from ancient Babylonia, China, Egypt, and Mexico.

The first true astronomers are said to be the Greeks, who deduced the Earth to be a sphere and attempted to measure its size. A summary of Greek astronomy came to us from Ptolemy of Alexandria's Almagest.

The Arabs developed the astrolabe and produced good star catalogs while in 1543, the Polish astronomer Copernicus demonstrated that the Sun, not the planet Earth, is the center of our planetary system

The Italian scientist Galileo was the first to use a telescope for astronomical study, 1609-1610.

The British astronomer William Herschel's suggestions on the shape of our galaxy were verified in 1923 by the U.S. astronomer Edwin Hubble's telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory in California.

Recent extension of the powers of astronomy to explore the universe has been made possible in the use of rockets, satellites, space stations, and space probes, while the launching of the Hubble Space Telescope into permanent orbit in 1990 has made it possible for the detection of celestial phenomena seven times more distant than by any Earth-based telescope.

This entry is located in the following unit: Astronomy and related astronomical terms (page 3)
core area (s) (noun), core areas (pl)
A nation's or a culture's historic homeland: A core area can relate to a central region of a city that is densely populated, ores especially distinguished by an outstanding historical development
This entry is located in the following unit: Geography Terms + (page 4)
rural area (s) (noun phrase), rural areas (pl)
A particular geographical region of an indefinite boundary outside of a city or a town: Japan's rural areas have been paved over and filled in with roads and dams, among other big infrastructure projects.

This entry is located in the following unit: Economics on a Global Scale (page 1)