word-vault
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A lightweight JavaScript package for English word definitions and collections.
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{
"term": "fixture",
"partOfSpeech": "noun",
"ox5000": true,
"cefr": "c1",
"definitions": [
{
"senseNumber": 1,
"definition": "a sports event that has been arranged to take place on a particular date and at a particular place",
"labels": "(British English)",
"cefr": "c1",
"examples": [
{
"text": "There are plans to make the race an annual fixture."
},
{
"text": "Saturday’s fixture against Liverpool"
},
{
"text": "the season’s fixture list"
},
{
"text": "The club was fined for not fulfilling its fixtures at the weekend."
},
{
"text": "The golf club has staged many international fixtures."
},
{
"text": "The team is playing an important fixture this evening."
},
{
"text": "a home fixture against Leeds"
}
],
"collocations": {
"adjective": ["important", "major", "difficult"],
"verb + fixture": ["play", "fulfil", "make something"],
"fixture + noun": ["list"],
"preposition": ["fixture against"]
}
},
{
"senseNumber": 2,
"definition": "a thing such as a bath or toilet that is fixed in a house and that you do not take with you when you move house",
"labels": "(British English)(figurative)(British English)(especially North American English)(British English)(British English)(North American English)(British English)(especially British English)(British English)(British English)(especially British English)(especially British English)(North American English usually)",
"cefr": "c1",
"examples": [
{
"text": "The price of the house includes **fixtures and fittings**."
},
{
"text": "He has stayed with us so long he seems to have become **a permanent fixture**."
}
],
"topics": ["Houses and homes"],
"collocations": {
"adjective": ["original", "light", "permanent"],
"phrases": ["fixtures and fittings"]
}
}
],
"pronunciations": {
"uk": [
{
"pronunciation": "/ˈfɪkstʃə(r)/",
"audio": "fi/fixture/fixture__gb_1.mp3"
}
],
"us": [
{
"pronunciation": "/ˈfɪkstʃər/",
"audio": "fi/fixture/fixture__us_1.mp3"
}
]
},
"wordOrigin": "late 16th cent. (in the sense ‘fixing, becoming fixed’): alteration (first found in Shakespeare) of obsolete fixure (from late Latin fixura, from Latin figere ‘to fix’), with t inserted on the pattern of mixture."
}