Zones of inhibition are areas where no bacteria can grow around an antibiotic compound. A bacterial 'lawn' most often appears as a light-colored and opaque layer over a darker field of supportive agar jelly. Gaps in this lawn of represent areas where growth has failed.
Most commonly associated with antibiotic susceptibility tests such as diffusion disc assays, a zone can appear around different test components depending on whether a component (like a doped filter disc) contains a compound that can prevent bacteria from growing, replicating or simply being alive.
Figure 1 below displays sample images of how a disc can appear on a plate. Only one of the example images represents a recordable, true zone of inhibition. The others are examples of zones where the bacteria is overcoming whatever the disc is doped with.

Figure 1:Examples of zones of inhibition.
In this image, we see that although the background lawn of bacteria is slightly lightened, there are many bacteria growing right up to the disc. There is no recordable antimicrobial effect.
We can see a radius that appears to have been cleared, however, there are several colonies growing within this radius. This could represent colonies of resistant bacteria, or regrowth of bacteria following the decomposition of the antimicrobial agent. Either way, this test would normally be repeated in the lab, as there is no recordable clear zone of inhibition.
There does appear to be a zone here, however, the zone is very small and there does appear to be a few colonies growing next to the plate. This ambiguity would lead to a repeat test if certainty was required. There is no clear zone here.
这里有一个非常明确的区域只有几个of small irregularities around the very edge of the zone. The bacteria-free area would be measured across its diameter and the distance recorded as the size of the zone.