frontier
frontier — noun
1. The official boundary marking where one country ends and another begins, usually
The official boundary marking where one country ends and another begins, usually with checkpoints where travellers must show identification documents.
The train crossed the frontier between France and Italy just before noon.
crossed the frontier between [country] and [country]
Gabriel had to show his passport at the frontier checkpoint before entering Poland.
at the frontier checkpoint
Tighter security measures were introduced along the eastern frontier last year.
Refugees waited for hours at the frontier crossing, hoping to be let through.
文法句型
the frontier
frontier between [country] and [country]
用法筆記
In British English 'frontier' is the everyday word for a national border with passport checks. In American English 'border' is far more common for this meaning; 'frontier' in US contexts usually refers to Sense 2 below.
常見錯誤
2. The outer edge of a region where people have built homes and communities, beyond
The outer edge of a region where people have built homes and communities, beyond which the land remains wild and largely unexplored, especially referring to the western United States during the 1800s.
The Gabriel family traveled west to start a new life on the American frontier.
on the [American] frontier [historical]
Life on the frontier required settlers to build their homes and grow all their food.
Ravindra read a novel about a pioneer family living on the frontier in the 1870s.
The frontier town of Deadwood grew quickly after gold was discovered nearby.
- borderland
the land near a boundary; less specific to settlement patterns
- wilderness
emphasizes the untamed natural state rather than the settlement edge
- outskirts
the outer parts of a town or city, not a historical region
文法句型
the frontier, on the frontier, the American frontier
用法筆記
This sense is deeply tied to US expansion history. It is often capitalized ('the American Frontier') when treated as a specific historical period or region. The word also appears in similar contexts for other countries (e.g., 'the Brazilian frontier').
常見錯誤
3. An imagined boundary that marks where one idea, quality, or condition ends and a
An imagined boundary that marks where one idea, quality, or condition ends and another begins.
The frontier between art and entertainment is not always easy to draw.
the frontier between [X] and [Y] [abstract]
Minh argued that the frontier between public and private life has become increasingly blurred.
Psychologists debate the frontier between normal anxiety and clinical depression.
Where does the frontier lie between harmless teasing and actual bullying?
- dividing line
more direct and less metaphorical; common in everyday speech
- boundary
can be physical or abstract; more general than 'frontier'
- threshold
emphasizes the point at which one state crosses into another
文法句型
the frontier between [X] and [Y]
用法筆記
This sense is almost always followed by 'between' with two contrasting nouns. The frontier is not a fixed line — it is a matter of interpretation or debate.
常見錯誤
4. The most advanced or extreme point reached in a field of learning, discovery, or
The most advanced or extreme point reached in a field of learning, discovery, or achievement, beyond which new work remains to be done.
Researchers at the institute are pushing back the frontiers of medical science.
pushing back the frontiers of [field]
Hyun believes space exploration represents humanity's next great frontier.
next frontier [metaphorical]
Kemi's work in quantum computing explores new frontiers in data processing.
Deep-sea exploration remains one of the last frontiers on our planet.
- cutting edge
emphasizes the newest, most advanced developments; more informal and technology-focused
- forefront
the leading position in a field; suggests active leadership rather than the boundary of knowledge
- vanguard
the group leading a movement or innovation; person-focused rather than field-focused
文法句型
the frontiers of [field], push back the frontiers, new frontier
用法筆記
Often used in the plural ('frontiers') to suggest many directions of progress. The phrase 'new frontier' is a common fixed expression for any exciting, unexplored area of activity.