turnout

turnout — noun

1. a figure that tells you how many people came to an event such as a concert or me

1.名詞B1
釋義

a figure that tells you how many people came to an event such as a concert or meeting — most commonly, the count of citizens who voted in an election.

例句

The festival had a turnout of over twenty thousand people on its opening day.

collocation: a turnout of [number]

Voter turnout in the local election was surprisingly low this year.

collocation: voter turnout / low turnout

同義詞
  • attendance

    more general; used for any event, not specifically voting

  • voter count

    restricted to elections only

  • crowd

    emphasises the physical group of people, not the statistical number

反義詞
  • absenteeism

    refers to the practice of staying away, the opposite of showing up

文法句型

high/low turnout

a turnout of [number]

用法筆記

Usually singular; frequently used with the adjectives 'high' or 'low' to describe the size of the crowd.

常見錯誤

The turnout of people was many.
The turnout was large.
💡Use 'large' or 'high' (not 'many') to describe a big turnout.
Many turnouts came to the concert.
The turnout at the concert was big.
💡'Turnout' is not a countable noun for people; it refers to the number.

2. a place beside a narrow road where the road becomes wider so that vehicles can s

2.名詞B2
釋義

a place beside a narrow road where the road becomes wider so that vehicles can stop safely or let others pass; also a short section of railway track used for letting trains pass each other or for storing rolling stock.

例句

Cyrus pulled into a turnout to let the ambulance pass on the winding mountain road.

collocation: pull into a turnout

The highway department added turnouts along the scenic route so drivers could stop and take photos.

同義詞
  • lay-by

    British English equivalent for roadside stopping areas

  • siding

    specifically for railway contexts

  • pull-off

    informal American term for a roadside stopping area

文法句型

pull into a turnout

park in a turnout

用法筆記

More common in American English than British English. British speakers are more likely to use 'lay-by' for a road-side stopping area.

3. the total amount of goods, crops, or products that are produced or yielded in a

3.名詞C1
釋義

the total amount of goods, crops, or products that are produced or yielded in a specified period, such as a day, season, or year.

例句

The factory's daily turnout of car parts has doubled since the new machines were installed.

Last season's turnout of rice was the best the farm had seen in a decade.

collocation: turnout of [crop]

同義詞
  • output

    the standard, more common word for production quantity; works in any industry

  • yield

    mostly agricultural — crops, fruit, or financial returns

  • production

    broader term covering the whole process, not just the quantity

文法句型

turnout of [product]

annual turnout

用法筆記

Commoner in agricultural (crop yields) and industrial contexts. For general production, 'output' is far more common in everyday English.

常見錯誤

The turnout of the factory increased.
The factory's output increased.
💡For manufactured goods, 'output' sounds more natural than 'turnout'.

4. a person's complete set of clothes and the accessories they wear with them, cons

4.名詞B2
釋義

a person's complete set of clothes and the accessories they wear with them, considered together as a single outfit.

例句

Jude showed up at the party in a sharp black turnout with polished leather shoes.

Her turnout for the wedding included a silk dress, a matching hat, and pearl earrings.

collocation: turnout for [occasion]

同義詞
  • outfit

    the standard modern word; much more common than 'turnout' for clothing

  • getup

    informal, often suggests something flashy or unusual

  • attire

    formal synonym for clothing, especially for special occasions

文法句型

a turnout in [colour/style]

用法筆記

This sense is dated or informal; 'outfit' or 'getup' are far more common in everyday conversation.

turnout — verb