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Definition of Fieldwork
1. Noun. A temporary fortification built by troops in the field.
Definition of Fieldwork
1. n. Any temporary fortification thrown up by an army in the field; - - commonly in the plural.
Definition of Fieldwork
1. Noun. work done, or observations made out in the real world rather than in controlled conditions ¹
2. Noun. A temporary fortification built by troops ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fieldwork
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fieldwork
Literary usage of Fieldwork
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Stability and Variation in Hopi Song by George List (1993)
"The fieldwork My fieldwork on the Hopi Indian Reservation occupied two summers
... During my fieldwork at the First Mesa in the summer of 1960 I played tape ..."
2. Stability and Variation in Hopi Song by George List (1993)
"The fieldwork My fieldwork on the Hopi Indian Reservation occupied two summers
... During my fieldwork at the First Mesa in the summer of 1960 I played tape ..."
3. Economics of Bridgework: A Sequel to Bridge Engineering by John Alexander Low Waddell (1921)
"... CHAPTER XXXVII ECONOMICS OF BRIDGE ENGINEERING fieldwork THE economics of
fieldwork in bridge building may be summed up in the following instructions to ..."
4. Railroad Curves and Earthwork by Calvin Frank Allen (1920)
"fieldwork of Laying out Spiral. (а) Select on the ground the vertex V arid
measure /; or else fix on ground, point L opposite the point К where the circular ..."
5. Qualitative Research for Tobacco Control: A How-to Introductory Manual for by Alison Mathie, Anne Camozzi (2005)
"Prepare for fieldwork 2. Live in the field (if fieldwork is conducted away ...
Conduct fieldwork 4. Return home from the field study Step 1- Prepare for ..."
6. The Reconfiguration of Political Order in Africa: A Case Study of North Kivu by Denis M. Tull (2005)
"However, the first period of fieldwork in North Kivu yielded preliminary hypotheses
which cast serious doubt on the validity of the fundamental premise of ..."