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word-vault

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A lightweight JavaScript package for English word definitions and collections.

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{ "term": "pioneer", "partOfSpeech": "noun", "ox5000": true, "cefr": "c1", "definitions": [ { "senseNumber": 1, "definition": "a person who is the first to study and develop a particular area of knowledge, culture, etc. that other people then continue to develop", "sensetop": "pioneer (in/of something)", "cefr": "c1", "examples": [ { "text": "a pioneer in the field of microsurgery" }, { "text": "a computer pioneer" }, { "text": "a pioneer aviator" }, { "text": "a pioneer design *(= one that introduces new ideas, methods, etc.)*" }, { "text": "one of the early pioneers in plastic surgery" }, { "text": "He is known as a pioneer in veterinary surgery." }, { "text": "He was one of the pioneers in opening up archaeology to everyone." }, { "text": "I was lucky to meet the heart transplant pioneer, Dr Christian Barnard." }, { "text": "Modern guitar design owes a lot to the pioneer designs of the forties and fifties." }, { "text": "She later became a pioneer of education for women." }, { "text": "The school was an early pioneer of the technique." } ], "synonyms": "trailblazer", "collocations": { "adjective": ["early", "true"], "pioneer + noun": ["spirit"], "preposition": ["pioneer in", "pioneer of"] } }, { "senseNumber": 2, "definition": "one of the first people to go to a particular place, especially in order to live and work there", "cefr": "c1", "examples": [ { "text": "Early pioneers settled on both sides of the Maple River." }, { "text": "the pioneer spirit" }, { "text": "The history of our nation isn't just about hardy pioneers and peaceful settlement, it's about violence and dispossession." }, { "text": "The space pioneer became the oldest person to go into space at the age of 82." } ] } ], "pronunciations": { "uk": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˌpaɪəˈnɪə(r)/", "audio": "pi/pioneer/pioneer__gb_1.mp3" } ], "us": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˌpaɪəˈnɪr/", "audio": "pi/pioneer/pioneer__us_1.mp3" } ] }, "wordOrigin": "early 16th cent. (as a military term denoting a member of the infantry): from French pionnier ‘foot soldier, pioneer’, Old French paonier, from paon, from Latin pedo, pedon- ‘foot soldier’, from Latin pes, ped- ‘foot’." }