overseas
overseas — adjective
1. connected with a country outside your own, or located there rather than at home.
connected with a country outside your own, or located there rather than at home.
The company opened an overseas branch in Bangkok last year.
pattern: overseas + noun
Overseas students at the fair shared food from twelve countries.
collocation: overseas students
The factory lost several overseas buyers after shipping costs rose.
Mila hopes to join an overseas volunteer program after college.
The town depends on overseas visitors during the summer festival.
- foreign
broader and sometimes more neutral; it can describe anything from another country, not only life or activity abroad
- international
usually stresses links between several countries, not simply being in one other country
- offshore
can overlap in business contexts, but often suggests finance, tax arrangements, or location at sea
文法句型
overseas + noun
用法筆記
Usually placed before a noun, especially with words about business, study, travel, and visitors: 'overseas branch', 'overseas student', 'overseas market'. Distinguish from adverb sense 1, which comes after the verb: 'work overseas'.
常見錯誤
overseas — adverb
1. in another country, or traveling there from home, often by crossing the sea.
in another country, or traveling there from home, often by crossing the sea.
Lena worked overseas for two years before returning to Kaohsiung.
pattern: work + overseas
Many nurses from Cebu move overseas to earn higher pay.
After graduation, Owen wants to study overseas for a master's degree.
The family sent medicine overseas after the typhoon hit Guam.
When local sales fell, the bakery started selling overseas.
- abroad
closest everyday synonym and often slightly more common in general English
- internationally
fits business or activity across countries, but sounds less natural for personal living or studying
文法句型
live/work/study + overseas
send/sell something + overseas
用法筆記
Usually comes after verbs such as 'live', 'work', 'study', 'move', 'send', and 'sell'. Distinguish from adjective sense 1: 'overseas staff' names the noun, but 'staff work overseas' tells where they work.