| class | | |
| n. (group) | 1. category, class, family | a collection of things sharing a common attribute.; "there are two classes of detergents" |
| ~ grammatical category, syntactic category | (grammar) a category of words having the same grammatical properties. |
| ~ substitution class, paradigm | the class of all items that can be substituted into the same position (or slot) in a grammatical sentence (are in paradigmatic relation with one another). |
| ~ aggregation, collection, accumulation, assemblage | several things grouped together or considered as a whole. |
| ~ brass family | (music) the family of brass instruments. |
| ~ violin family | (music) the family of bowed stringed instruments. |
| ~ woodwind family | (music) the family of woodwind instruments. |
| ~ stamp | a type or class.; "more men of his stamp are needed" |
| ~ sex | either of the two categories (male or female) into which most organisms are divided.; "the war between the sexes" |
| ~ declension | a class of nouns or pronouns or adjectives in Indo-European languages having the same (or very similar) inflectional forms.; "the first declension in Latin" |
| ~ conjugation | a class of verbs having the same inflectional forms. |
| ~ denomination | a class of one kind of unit in a system of numbers or measures or weights or money.; "he flashed a fistful of bills of large denominations" |
| ~ histocompatibility complex | a family of fifty or more genes on the sixth human chromosome that code for proteins on the surfaces of cells and that play a role in the immune response. |
| ~ superphylum | (biology) a taxonomic group ranking between a phylum and below a class or subclass. |
| n. (group) | 2. class, course, form, grade | a body of students who are taught together.; "early morning classes are always sleepy" |
| ~ assemblage, gathering | a group of persons together in one place. |
| ~ master class | a class (especially in music) given to talented students by an expert. |
| ~ discussion section, section | a small class of students who are part of a larger course but are taught separately.; "a graduate student taught sections for the professor's lecture course" |
| n. (group) | 3. class, social class, socio-economic class, stratum | people having the same social, economic, or educational status.; "the working class"; "an emerging professional class" |
| ~ people | (plural) any group of human beings (men or women or children) collectively.; "old people"; "there were at least 200 people in the audience" |
| ~ world, domain | people in general; especially a distinctive group of people with some shared interest.; "the Western world" |
| ~ society | an extended social group having a distinctive cultural and economic organization. |
| ~ age class | people in the same age range. |
| ~ agriculture | the class of people engaged in growing food. |
| ~ sodality, brotherhood, fraternity | people engaged in a particular occupation.; "the medical fraternity" |
| ~ estate of the realm, the three estates, estate | a major social class or order of persons regarded collectively as part of the body politic of the country (especially in the United Kingdom) and formerly possessing distinct political rights. |
| ~ labor, labour, proletariat, working class | a social class comprising those who do manual labor or work for wages.; "there is a shortage of skilled labor in this field" |
| ~ lower class, underclass | the social class lowest in the social hierarchy. |
| ~ bourgeoisie, middle class | the social class between the lower and upper classes. |
| ~ booboisie | class consisting of all those who are considered boobs. |
| ~ commonality, commonalty, commons | a class composed of persons lacking clerical or noble rank. |
| ~ peasantry | the class of peasants. |
| ~ demimonde | a class of woman not considered respectable because of indiscreet or promiscuous behavior. |
| ~ underworld | the criminal class. |
| ~ yeomanry | class of small freeholders who cultivated their own land. |
| ~ caste | a social class separated from others by distinctions of hereditary rank or profession or wealth. |
| ~ caste | (Hinduism) a hereditary social class among Hindus; stratified according to ritual purity. |
| ~ class structure | the organization of classes within a society. |
| ~ upper class, upper crust | the class occupying the highest position in the social hierarchy. |
| ~ ninja | a class of 14th century Japanese who were trained in martial arts and were hired for espionage and assassinations. |
| ~ firing line | the most advanced and responsible group in an activity.; "the firing line is where the action is" |
| ~ immigrant class | recent immigrants who are lumped together as a class by their low socioeconomic status in spite of different cultural backgrounds. |
| ~ center | politically moderate persons; centrists. |
| ~ old school | a class of people favoring traditional ideas. |
| ~ market | the customers for a particular product or service.; "before they publish any book they try to determine the size of the market for it" |
| ~ craft, trade | people who perform a particular kind of skilled work.; "he represented the craft of brewers"; "as they say in the trade" |
| ~ fair sex, womanhood, woman | women as a class.; "it's an insult to American womanhood"; "woman is the glory of creation"; "the fair sex gathered on the veranda" |
| n. (act) | 4. class, course, course of instruction, course of study | education imparted in a series of lessons or meetings.; "he took a course in basket weaving"; "flirting is not unknown in college classes" |
| ~ didactics, education, educational activity, instruction, pedagogy, teaching | the activities of educating or instructing; activities that impart knowledge or skill.; "he received no formal education"; "our instruction was carefully programmed"; "good classroom teaching is seldom rewarded" |
| ~ coursework | work assigned to and done by a student during a course of study; usually it is evaluated as part of the student's grade in the course. |
| ~ adult education | a course (via lectures or correspondence) for adults who are not otherwise engaged in formal study. |
| ~ art class | a class in which you learn to draw or paint. |
| ~ childbirth-preparation class | a course that teaches pregnant women to use breathing and concentration and exercise techniques to use during labor. |
| ~ lesson | a unit of instruction.; "he took driving lessons" |
| ~ correspondence course | a course offered (by mail) by a correspondence school. |
| ~ course of lectures | a series of lectures dealing with a subject. |
| ~ directed study | a course of study that is supervised and controlled by a specialist in the subject.; "he registered for directed study"; "he got credit for directed study"; "he did directed study" |
| ~ elective, elective course | a course that the student can select from among alternatives. |
| ~ extension course | a course offered as part of an extension service. |
| ~ home study | a course of study carried out at home rather than in a classroom. |
| ~ industrial arts | a course in the methods of using tools and machinery as taught in secondary schools and technical schools. |
| ~ orientation course, orientation | a course introducing a new situation or environment. |
| ~ propaedeutic, propaedeutics | a course that provides an introduction to an art or science (or to more advanced study generally). |
| ~ refresher course, refresher | a course that reviews and updates a topic for those who have not kept abreast of developments. |
| ~ required course | a course that all students are required to take. |
| ~ seminar | a course offered for a small group of advanced students. |
| ~ shop class, shop | a course of instruction in a trade (as carpentry or electricity).; "I built a birdhouse in shop" |
| ~ workshop | a brief intensive course for a small group; emphasizes problem solving. |
| ~ lecturing, lecture | teaching by giving a discourse on some subject (typically to a class). |
| ~ class period, course session, recitation | a regularly scheduled session as part of a course of study. |
| n. (group) | 5. class, division | a league ranked by quality.; "he played baseball in class D for two years"; "Princeton is in the NCAA Division 1-AA" |
| ~ league, conference | an association of sports teams that organizes matches for its members. |
| n. (group) | 6. class, year | a body of students who graduate together.; "the class of '97"; "she was in my year at Hoehandle High" |
| ~ assemblage, gathering | a group of persons together in one place. |
| ~ graduating class | the body of students who graduate together this year. |
| ~ senior class | final grade or class in high school or college. |
| ~ junior class | penultimate class in high school or college. |
| ~ sophomore class | the second class in a four-year college or high school. |
| ~ freshman class | the first class in college or high school. |
| n. (group) | 7. class | (biology) a taxonomic group containing one or more orders. |
| ~ class schizomycetes, schizomycetes | a former classification. |
| ~ class cyanobacteria, class cyanophyceae, cyanophyceae | photosynthetic bacteria found in fresh and salt water, having chlorophyll a and phycobilins; once thought to be algae: blue-green algae. |
| ~ class sarcodina, sarcodina | characterized by the formation of pseudopods for locomotion and taking food: Actinopoda; Rhizopoda. |
| ~ actinopoda, subclass actinopoda | heliozoans; radiolarians. |
| ~ rhizopoda, subclass rhizopoda | creeping protozoans: amoebas and foraminifers. |
| ~ ciliata, ciliophora, class ciliata, class ciliophora | class of protozoa having cilia or hairlike appendages on part or all of the surface during some part of the life cycle. |
| ~ infusoria, subclass infusoria | in some recent classifications, coextensive with the Ciliata: minute organisms found in decomposing infusions of organic matter. |
| ~ chrysophyceae, class chrysophyceae, class heterokontae, heterokontae | all the yellow-green algae having flagella of unequal length. |
| ~ class xanthophyceae, xanthophyceae | yellow-green algae. |
| ~ bacillariophyceae, class bacillariophyceae, class diatomophyceae, diatomophyceae | marine and freshwater eukaryotic algae: diatoms. |
| ~ class phaeophyceae, phaeophyceae | brown algae; mostly marine and littoral eukaryotic algae. |
| ~ class cyclosporeae, cyclosporeae | in more recent classifications superseded by the order Fucales. |
| ~ class euglenophyceae, euglenophyceae | coextensive with the division Euglenophyta. |
| ~ chlorophyceae, class chlorophyceae | algae distinguished chiefly by having flagella and a clear green color, their chlorophyll being masked little if at all by other pigments. |
| ~ class ulvophyceae, ulvophyceae | alternative name for the class Chlorophyceae in some classifications. |
| ~ charophyceae, class charophyceae | in some classifications: contains only the order Charales. |
| ~ class rhodophyceae, rhodophyceae | coextensive with the Rhodophyta: red algae. |
| ~ class flagellata, class mastigophora, flagellata, mastigophora | protozoa having flagella. |
| ~ subclass zoomastigina, zoomastigina | in some classifications considered a phylum of the kingdom Protista; holozoic or saprozoic flagellates. |
| ~ phytomastigina, subclass phytomastigina | plantlike flagellates containing chlorophyll; often considered unicellular algae. |
| ~ class cryptophyceae, cryptophyceae | motile usually brownish-green protozoa-like algae. |
| ~ class sporozoa, sporozoa | strictly parasitic protozoans that are usually immobile; includes plasmodia and coccidia and piroplasms and malaria parasites. |
| ~ subclass telosporidia, telosporidia | parasitic sporozoans that form spores containing one or more infective sporozoites. |
| ~ acnidosporidia, subclass acnidosporidia | a subclass of Sporozoa. |
| ~ cnidosporidia, subclass cnidosporidia | single-host parasites of lower vertebrates and invertebrates. |
| ~ ascidiaceae, class ascidiaceae | sometimes classified as an order: sea squirts. |
| ~ class thaliacea, thaliacea | small class of free-swimming tunicates; sometimes classified as an order. |
| ~ class larvacea, larvacea | small free-swimming tunicates; sometimes classified as an order. |
| ~ agnatha, superclass agnatha | superclass of eel-shaped chordates lacking jaws and pelvic fins: lampreys; hagfishes; some extinct forms. |
| ~ gnathostomata, superclass gnathostomata | comprising all vertebrates with upper and lower jaws. |
| ~ class placodermi, placodermi | extinct group of bony-plated fishes with primitive jaws. |
| ~ chondrichthyes, class chondrichthyes | cartilaginous fishes. |
| ~ holocephali, subclass holocephali | chimaeras and extinct forms. |
| ~ elasmobranchii, selachii, subclass elasmobranchii, subclass selachii | sharks; rays; dogfishes; skates. |
| ~ aves, class aves | (ornithology) the class of birds. |
| ~ archaeornithes, subclass archaeornithes | primitive reptile-like fossil birds of the Jurassic or early Cretaceous. |
| ~ amphibia, class amphibia | the class of vertebrates that live on land but breed in water; frogs; toads; newts; salamanders; caecilians. |
| ~ class reptilia, reptilia | class of cold-blooded air-breathing vertebrates with completely ossified skeleton and a body usually covered with scales or horny plates; once the dominant land animals. |
| ~ anapsida, subclass anapsida | oldest known reptiles; turtles and extinct Permian forms. |
| ~ lepidosauria, subclass lepidosauria | diapsid reptiles: lizards; snakes; tuataras. |
| ~ archosauria, subclass archosauria | a large subclass of diapsid reptiles including: crocodiles; alligators; dinosaurs; pterosaurs; plesiosaurs; ichthyosaurs; thecodonts. |
| ~ subclass synapsida, synapsida | extinct reptiles of the Permian to Jurassic considered ancestral to mammals. |
| ~ chelicerata, superclass chelicerata | spiders; scorpions; horseshoe crabs. |
| ~ arachnida, class arachnida | a large class of arthropods including spiders and ticks and scorpions and daddy longlegs; have four pairs of walking legs and no wings. |
| ~ superclass myriapoda | used in some classifications to encompass the millipedes (Diplopoda) and centipedes (Chilopoda); formerly a large taxon including also the Pauropoda and Symphyla; the term Myriapoda now usually used synonymously with Diplopoda and limited to the millipedes. |
| ~ class pauropoda, pauropoda | an obscure class of minute arthropods with branched antennae and 8 to 10 pairs of legs. |
| ~ class symphyla, symphyla | small class of minute arthropods; unimportant except for the garden centipede. |
| ~ class tardigrada, tardigrada | in some classifications considered a separate phylum: microscopic arachnid-like invertebrates living in water or damp moss having 4 pairs of legs and instead of a mouth a pair of stylets or needlelike piercing organs connected with the pharynx. |
| ~ chilopoda, class chilopoda | arthropods having the trunk composed of numerous somites each bearing one pair of legs: centipedes. |
| ~ class diplopoda, class myriapoda, diplopoda, myriapoda | arthropods having the body composed of numerous double somites each with two pairs of legs: millipedes. |
| ~ class mammalia, mammalia | warm-blooded vertebrates characterized by mammary glands in the female. |
| ~ prototheria, subclass prototheria | echidnas; platypus. |
| ~ pantotheria, subclass pantotheria | generalized extinct mammals widespread during the Jurassic; commonly conceded to be ancestral to marsupial and placental mammals. |
| ~ metatheria, subclass metatheria | pouched animals. |
| ~ eutheria, subclass eutheria | all mammals except monotremes and marsupials. |
| ~ class hyalospongiae, hyalospongiae | sponges with siliceous spicules that have six rays; choanocytes are restricted to finger-shaped chambers. |
| ~ class scyphozoa, scyphozoa | coelenterates in which the polyp stage is absent or at least inconspicuous: jellyfishes. |
| ~ class hydrozoa, hydrozoa | coelenterates typically having alternation of generations; hydroid phase is usually colonial giving rise to the medusoid phase by budding: hydras and jellyfishes. |
| ~ actinozoa, anthozoa, class actinozoa, class anthozoa | a large class of sedentary marine coelenterates that includes sea anemones and corals; the medusoid phase is entirely suppressed. |
| ~ class nuda, nuda | ctenophores lacking tentacles; comprises one genus: beroe. |
| ~ class tentaculata, tentaculata | ctenophores have retractile tentacles. |
| ~ class turbellaria, turbellaria | free-living flatworms. |
| ~ class trematoda, trematoda | parasitic flatworms (including flukes). |
| ~ cestoda, class cestoda | tapeworms. |
| ~ aphasmidia, class aphasmidia | one of two subgroups of Nematoda used in some classification systems. |
| ~ class phasmidia, phasmidia | one of two subgroups of Nematoda used in some classification systems. |
| ~ archiannelida, class archiannelida | a class of Annelida. |
| ~ class oligochaeta, oligochaeta | earthworms. |
| ~ class polychaeta, polychaeta | marine annelid worms. |
| ~ class hirudinea, hirudinea | hermaphroditic aquatic or terrestrial or parasitic annelids. |
| ~ class scaphopoda, scaphopoda | small class of bilaterally symmetrical marine forms comprising the tooth shells. |
| ~ class gasteropoda, class gastropoda, gasteropoda, gastropoda | snails and slugs and their relatives. |
| ~ opisthobranchia, subclass opisthobranchia | gastropods having the gills when present posterior to the heart and having no operculum: includes sea slugs; sea butterflies; sea hares. |
| ~ amphineura, subclass amphineura | a class of Gastropoda. |
| ~ class polyplacophora, polyplacophora | small class of marine mollusks comprising the chitons; sometimes considered an order of the subclass Amphineura. |
| ~ bivalvia, class bivalvia, class lamellibranchia, class pelecypoda, lamellibranchia | oysters; clams; scallops; mussels. |
| ~ cephalopoda, class cephalopoda | octopuses; squids; cuttlefish; pearly nautilus. |
| ~ dibranchia, dibranchiata, subclass dibranchia, subclass dibranchiata | comprising all living cephalopods except the family Nautilidae: the orders Octopoda (octopuses) and Decapoda (squids and cuttlefish). |
| ~ class crustacea, crustacea | class of mandibulate arthropods including: lobsters; crabs; shrimps; woodlice; barnacles; decapods; water fleas. |
| ~ malacostraca, subclass malacostraca | largest subclass of Crustacea including most of the well-known marine, freshwater, and terrestrial crustaceans: crabs; lobsters; shrimps; sow bugs; beach flies. |
| ~ entomostraca, subclass entomostraca | in some older classifications includes the Branchiopoda and Copepoda and Ostracoda and Cirripedia; no longer in technical use. |
| ~ branchiopoda, subclass branchiopoda | primitive aquatic mainly freshwater crustaceans: fairy shrimps; brine shrimps; tadpole shrimps; can shrimps; water fleas. |
| ~ copepoda, subclass copepoda | minute planktonic or parasitic crustaceans. |
| ~ ostracoda, subclass ostracoda | seed shrimps. |
| ~ cirripedia, subclass cirripedia | barnacles. |
| ~ class onychophora, onychophora | enigmatic small elongated wormlike terrestrial invertebrates of damp dark habitats in warm regions; distinct from the phylum Annelida; resemble slugs with legs and are sometimes described as the missing link between arthropods and annelids. |
| ~ class hexapoda, class insecta, hexapoda, insecta | insects; about five-sixths of all known animal species. |
| ~ exopterygota, hemimetabola, subclass exopterygota | subclass of insects characterized by gradual and usually incomplete metamorphosis. |
| ~ asteroidea, class asteroidea | sea stars. |
| ~ class ophiuroidea, ophiuroidea | brittle stars and basket stars. |
| ~ ophiurida, subclass ophiurida | brittle stars. |
| ~ euryalida, subclass euryalida | basket stars. |
| ~ class echinoidea, echinoidea | sea urchins and sand dollars. |
| ~ class crinoidea, crinoidea | sea lilies. |
| ~ class holothuroidea, holothuroidea | class of echinoderms including the sea cucumbers. |
| ~ hominoidea, superfamily hominoidea | anthropoid apes and human beings. |
| ~ channidae, class channidae | snakeheads. |
| ~ class osteichthyes, osteichthyes | a class of fish having a skeleton composed of bone in addition to cartilage. |
| ~ crossopterygii, subclass crossopterygii | fishes having paired fins resembling limbs and regarded as ancestral to amphibians. |
| ~ dipnoi, subclass dipnoi | bony fishes of the southern hemisphere that breathe by a modified air bladder as well as gills; sometimes classified as an order of Crossopterygii. |
| ~ subclass teleostei, teleostei | large diverse group of bony fishes; includes most living species. |
| ~ biological science, biology | the science that studies living organisms. |
| ~ taxon, taxonomic category, taxonomic group | animal or plant group having natural relations. |
| ~ phylum | (biology) the major taxonomic group of animals and plants; contains classes. |
| ~ order | (biology) taxonomic group containing one or more families. |
| ~ anthoceropsida, class anthoceropsida | hornworts: in some classification systems included in the class Hepaticopsida. |
| ~ bryopsida, class bryopsida, class musci, musci | true mosses: bryophytes having leafy rather than thalloid gametophytes: comprises orders Andreaeales; Bryales; Dicranales; Eubryales; Sphagnales. |
| ~ class hepaticae, class hepaticopsida, hepaticae, hepaticopsida | liverworts: comprises orders Anthocerotales; Jungermanniales; Marchantiales; Sphaerocarpales. |
| ~ class gymnospermae, division gymnospermophyta, gymnospermae, gymnospermophyta | plants having naked seeds not enclosed in an ovary; in some systems considered a class (Gymnospermae) and in others a division (Gymnospermophyta); comprises three subdivisions (or classes): Cycadophytina (class Cycadopsida) and Gnetophytina (class Gnetopsida) and Coniferophytina (class Coniferopsida); in some classifications the Coniferophytina are divided into three groups: Pinophytina (class Pinopsida) and Ginkgophytina (class Ginkgopsida) and Taxophytina (class Taxopsida). |
| ~ class gnetopsida, gnetophyta, gnetophytina, gnetopsida, subdivision gnetophytina | gymnospermous flowering plants; supposed link between conifers and angiosperms; in some systems classified as a class (Gnetopsida) and in others as a subdivision (Gnetophytina or Gnetophyta). |
| ~ class cycadopsida, cycadophyta, cycadophytina, cycadopsida, subdivision cycadophyta, subdivision cycadophytina | palmlike gymnosperms: includes the surviving order Cycadales and several extinct orders; possibly not a natural group; in some systems considered a class (Cycadopsida) and in others a subdivision (Cycadophytina or Cycadophyta). |
| ~ class pteridospermopsida, pteridospermopsida | extinct gymnosperms most of Carboniferous to Jurassic: seed ferns and allies. |
| ~ class coniferopsida, coniferophyta, coniferophytina, coniferopsida, subdivision coniferophytina | cone-bearing gymnosperms dating from the Carboniferous period; most are substantial trees; includes the classes Pinopsida (subdivision Pinophytina) and Ginkgopsida (subdivision Ginkgophytina) and Taxopsida (subdivision Taxophytina) which in turn include the surviving orders Coniferales and Taxales (yews) and sometimes Ginkgoales as well as extinct orders such as Cordaitales (of the Carboniferous and Permian). |
| ~ class pinopsida, pinophytina, pinopsida, subdivision pinophytina | most conifers: in some systems classified as a class (Pinopsida) and in others as a subdivision (Pinophytina); used in some classifications for one of five subdivisions of Gymnospermophyta. |
| ~ class taxopsida, subdivision taxophytina, taxophytina, taxopsida | yews: in some systems classified as a class (Taxopsida) and in others as a subdivision (Taxophytina) used in some classifications for one of five subdivisions of Gymnospermophyta. |
| ~ class ginkgophytina, class ginkgopsida, ginkgophytina, ginkgopsida, subdivision ginkgophyta, subdivision ginkgophytina | ginkgos: in some systems classified as a class and in others as a subdivision; used in some classifications for one of five subdivisions of Gymnospermophyta. |
| ~ angiospermae, anthophyta, class angiospermae, division anthophyta, division magnoliophyta, magnoliophyta | comprising flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed in an ovary; in some systems considered a class (Angiospermae) and in others a division (Magnoliophyta or Anthophyta). |
| ~ class dicotyledonae, class dicotyledones, class magnoliopsida, dicotyledonae, dicotyledones, magnoliopsida | comprising seed plants that produce an embryo with paired cotyledons and net-veined leaves; divided into six (not always well distinguished) subclasses (or superorders): Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae (considered primitive); Caryophyllidae (an early and distinctive offshoot); and three more or less advanced groups: Dilleniidae; Rosidae; Asteridae. |
| ~ magnoliidae, ranalian complex, subclass magnoliidae | a group of families of trees and shrubs and herbs having well-developed perianths and apocarpous ovaries and generally regarded as the most primitive extant flowering plants; contains 36 families including Magnoliaceae and Ranunculaceae; sometimes classified as a superorder. |
| ~ class liliopsida, class monocotyledonae, class monocotyledones, liliopsida, monocotyledonae, monocotyledones | comprising seed plants that produce an embryo with a single cotyledon and parallel-veined leaves: includes grasses and lilies and palms and orchids; divided into four subclasses or superorders: Alismatidae; Arecidae; Commelinidae; and Liliidae. |
| ~ alismatidae, subclass alismatidae | one of four subclasses or superorders of Monocotyledones; comprises about 500 species in 14 families of aquatic and semiaquatic herbs. |
| ~ arecidae, subclass arecidae | one of four subclasses or superorder of Monocotyledones; comprises about 6400 species in 5 families of trees and shrubs and terrestrial herbs and a few free-floating aquatics including: Palmae; Araceae; Pandanaceae and Lemnaceae. |
| ~ commelinidae, subclass commelinidae | one of four subclasses or superorders of Monocotyledones; comprises about 19,000 species in 25 families of mostly terrestrial herbs especially of moist places including: Cyperaceae; Gramineae; Bromeliaceae; and Zingiberaceae. |
| ~ caryophyllidae, subclass caryophyllidae | a group of families of mostly flowers having basal or central placentation and trinucleate pollen (binucleate pollen is commoner in flowering plants); contains 14 families including: Caryophyllaceae (carnations and pinks); Aizoaceae; Amaranthaceae; Batidaceae; Chenopodiaceae; Cactaceae (order Opuntiales); Nyctaginaceae; Phytolaccaceae; corresponds approximately to order Caryophyllales; sometimes classified as a superorder. |
| ~ asteridae, subclass asteridae | a group of mostly sympetalous herbs and some trees and shrubs mostly with 2 fused carpels; contains 43 families including Campanulales; Solanaceae; Scrophulariaceae; Labiatae; Verbenaceae; Rubiaceae; Compositae; sometimes classified as a superorder. |
| ~ rosidae, subclass rosidae | a group of trees and shrubs and herbs mostly with polypetalous flowers; contains 108 families including Rosaceae; Crassulaceae; Myrtaceae; Melastomaceae; Euphorbiaceae; Umbelliferae. |
| ~ hamamelidae, subclass hamamelidae | a group of chiefly woody plants considered among the most primitive of angiosperms; perianth poorly developed or lacking; flowers often unisexual and often in catkins and often wind pollinated; contains 23 families including the Betulaceae and Fagaceae (includes the Amentiferae); sometimes classified as a superorder. |
| ~ dilleniidae, subclass dilleniidae | a group of families of more or less advanced trees and shrubs and herbs having either polypetalous or gamopetalous corollas and often with ovules attached to the walls of the ovary; contains 69 families including Ericaceae and Cruciferae and Malvaceae; sometimes classified as a superorder. |
| ~ liliidae, subclass liliidae | one of four subclasses or superorders of Monocotyledones; comprises 17 families including: Liliaceae; Alliaceae; Amaryllidaceae; Iridaceae; Orchidaceae; Trilliaceae. |
| ~ class zygomycetes, zygomycetes | class of fungi coextensive with subdivision Zygomycota. |
| ~ class myxomycetes, myxomycetes | the class of true slime molds; essentially equivalent to the division Myxomycota. |
| ~ acrasiomycetes, class acrasiomycetes | cellular slime molds; in some classifications placed in kingdom Protoctista. |
| ~ class oomycetes, oomycetes | nonphotosynthetic fungi that resemble algae and that reproduce by forming oospores; sometimes classified as protoctists. |
| ~ chytridiomycetes, class chytridiomycetes | a class of mostly aquatic fungi; saprophytic or parasitic on algae or fungi or plants. |
| ~ class eumycetes, eumycetes | category used in some classifications: coextensive with division Eumycota. |
| ~ class deuteromycetes, deuteromycetes | form class; coextensive with subdivision Deuteromycota. |
| ~ basidiomycetes, class basidiomycetes | large class of higher fungi coextensive with subdivision Basidiomycota. |
| ~ homobasidiomycetes, subclass homobasidiomycetes | category used in some classification systems for various basidiomycetous fungi including e.g. mushrooms and puffballs which are usually placed in the classes Gasteromycetes and Hymenomycetes. |
| ~ heterobasidiomycetes, subclass heterobasidiomycetes | category used in some classification systems for various basidiomycetous fungi including rusts and smuts. |
| ~ class hymenomycetes, hymenomycetes | used in some classifications; usually coextensive with order Agaricales: mushrooms; toadstools; agarics; bracket fungi. |
| ~ ascomycetes, class ascomycetes | large class of higher fungi coextensive with division Ascomycota: sac fungi. |
| ~ euascomycetes, subclass euascomycetes | category not used in many classification systems. |
| ~ class hemiascomycetes, hemiascomycetes | class of fungi in which no ascocarps are formed: yeasts and some plant parasites. |
| ~ class plectomycetes, plectomycetes | class of fungi in which the fruiting body is a cleistothecium (it releases spores only on decay or disintegration). |
| ~ class pyrenomycetes, pyrenomycetes | class of fungi in which the fruiting body is a perithecium; includes powdery mildews and ergot and Neurospora. |
| ~ discomycetes, subclass discomycetes | a large and taxonomically difficult group of Ascomycetes in which the fleshy fruiting body is disklike or cup-shaped. |
| ~ class gasteromycetes, class gastromycetes, gasteromycetes, gastromycetes | fungi in which the hymenium is enclosed until after spores have matured: puffballs; earth stars; stinkhorn fungi. |
| ~ class tiliomycetes, tiliomycetes | category used in some systems to comprise the two orders Ustilaginales (smuts) and Uredinales (rusts). |
| ~ class filicinae, class filicopsida, filicinae, filicopsida | ferns. |
| ~ class psilopsida, class psilotatae, psilopsida, psilotatae | whisk ferns; comprising the family Psilotaceae or Psilotatae: vascular plants with no roots, partial if any leaf differentiation, and rudimentary spore sacs. |
| ~ class equisetatae, class sphenopsida, equisetatae, sphenopsida | horsetails and related forms. |
| ~ class lycopodiate, class lycopsida, lycopodiate, lycopsida | club mosses and related forms: includes Lycopodiales; Isoetales; Selaginellales; and extinct Lepidodendrales; sometimes considered a subdivision of Tracheophyta. |
| ~ class lycopodineae, lycopodineae | alternative designation for the class Lycopsida. |
| n. (attribute) | 8. class | elegance in dress or behavior.; "she has a lot of class" |
| ~ elegance | a refined quality of gracefulness and good taste.; "she conveys an aura of elegance and gentility" |
| ~ colloquialism | a colloquial expression; characteristic of spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal speech. |
| v. (cognition) | 9. assort, class, classify, separate, sort, sort out | arrange or order by classes or categories.; "How would you classify these pottery shards--are they prehistoric?" |
| ~ unitise, unitize | separate or classify into units.; "The hospital was unitized for efficiency" |
| ~ catalogue, catalog | make an itemized list or catalog of; classify.; "He is cataloguing his photographic negatives" |
| ~ compare | examine and note the similarities or differences of.; "John compared his haircut to his friend's"; "We compared notes after we had both seen the movie" |
| ~ isolate | separate (experiences) from the emotions relating to them. |
| ~ refer | think of, regard, or classify under a subsuming principle or with a general group or in relation to another.; "This plant can be referred to a known species" |
| ~ reclassify | classify anew, change the previous classification.; "The zoologists had to reclassify the mollusks after they found new species" |
| ~ size | sort according to size. |
| ~ dichotomise, dichotomize | divide into two opposing groups or kinds. |
| ~ stereotype, pigeonhole, stamp | treat or classify according to a mental stereotype.; "I was stereotyped as a lazy Southern European" |
| ~ group | arrange into a group or groups.; "Can you group these shapes together?" |
| ~ categorise, categorize | place into or assign to a category.; "Children learn early on to categorize" |
| ~ grade | determine the grade of or assign a grade to. |
| ~ number, count | put into a group.; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize winners among its members" |
| kind | | |
| n. (cognition) | 1. form, kind, sort, variety | a category of things distinguished by some common characteristic or quality.; "sculpture is a form of art"; "what kinds of desserts are there?" |
| ~ category | a general concept that marks divisions or coordinations in a conceptual scheme. |
| ~ description | sort or variety.; "every description of book was there" |
| ~ type | a subdivision of a particular kind of thing.; "what type of sculpture do you prefer?" |
| ~ antitype | an opposite or contrasting type. |
| ~ art form | (architecture) a form of artistic expression (such as writing or painting or architecture). |
| ~ style | a particular kind (as to appearance).; "this style of shoe is in demand" |
| ~ flavour, flavor | (physics) the six kinds of quarks. |
| ~ colour, color | (physics) the characteristic of quarks that determines their role in the strong interaction.; "each flavor of quarks comes in three colors" |
| ~ species | a specific kind of something.; "a species of molecule"; "a species of villainy" |
| ~ genus | a general kind of something.; "ignore the genus communism" |
| ~ make, brand | a recognizable kind.; "there's a new brand of hero in the movies now"; "what make of car is that?" |
| ~ genre | a kind of literary or artistic work. |
| ~ ilk, like | a kind of person.; "We'll not see his like again"; "I can't tolerate people of his ilk" |
| ~ manner | a kind.; "what manner of man are you?" |
| ~ model | a type of product.; "his car was an old model" |
| ~ stripe | a kind or category.; "businessmen of every stripe joined in opposition to the proposal" |
| ~ like, the like, the likes of | a similar kind.; "dogs, foxes, and the like"; "we don't want the likes of you around here" |
| adj. | 2. kind | having or showing a tender and considerate and helpful nature; used especially of persons and their behavior.; "kind to sick patients"; "a kind master"; "kind words showing understanding and sympathy"; "thanked her for her kind letter" |
| ~ benignant, benign | pleasant and beneficial in nature or influence.; "a benign smile"; "the benign sky"; "the benign influence of pure air" |
| ~ considerate | showing concern for the rights and feelings of others.; "friends considerate enough to leave us alone" |
| ~ good-natured | having an easygoing and cheerful disposition.; "too good-natured to resent a little criticism"; "the good-natured policeman on our block"; "the sounds of good-natured play" |
| ~ soft | compassionate and kind; conciliatory.; "he was soft on his children" |
| ~ benignant, gracious | characterized by kindness and warm courtesy especially of a king to his subjects.; "our benignant king" |
| ~ benign | kindness of disposition or manner.; "the benign ruler of millions"; "benign intentions" |
| ~ good-hearted, kindly, large-hearted, openhearted, benevolent, charitable, sympathetic | showing or motivated by sympathy and understanding and generosity.; "was charitable in his opinions of others"; "kindly criticism"; "a kindly act"; "sympathetic words"; "a large-hearted mentor" |
| ~ gentle | having or showing a kindly or tender nature.; "the gentle touch of her hand"; "her gentle manner was comforting"; "a gentle sensitive nature"; "gentle blue eyes" |
| ~ kind-hearted, kindhearted | having or proceeding from an innately kind disposition.; "a generous and kindhearted teacher" |
| ~ merciful | showing or giving mercy.; "sought merciful treatment for the captives"; "a merciful god" |
| adj. | 3. genial, kind | agreeable, conducive to comfort.; "a dry climate kind to asthmatics"; "the genial sunshine"; "hot summer pavements are anything but kind to the feet" |
| ~ hospitable | favorable to life and growth.; "soil sufficiently hospitable for forest growth"; "a hospitable environment" |
| adj. | 4. kind, tolerant | tolerant and forgiving under provocation.; "our neighbor was very kind about the window our son broke" |
| ~ forgiving | inclined or able to forgive and show mercy.; "a kindly forgiving nature"; "a forgiving embrace to the naughty child" |
| quality | | |
| n. (attribute) | 1. quality | an essential and distinguishing attribute of something or someone.; "the quality of mercy is not strained" |
| ~ attribute | an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of an entity. |
| ~ appearance, visual aspect | outward or visible aspect of a person or thing. |
| ~ attractiveness, attraction | the quality of arousing interest; being attractive or something that attracts.; "her personality held a strange attraction for him" |
| ~ uncloudedness, clarity, clearness | the quality of clear water.; "when she awoke the clarity was back in her eyes" |
| ~ opaqueness, opacity | the quality of being opaque to a degree; the degree to which something reduces the passage of light. |
| ~ divisibility | the quality of being divisible; the capacity to be divided into parts or divided among a number of persons. |
| ~ ease, easiness, simpleness, simplicity | freedom from difficulty or hardship or effort.; "he rose through the ranks with apparent ease"; "they put it into containers for ease of transportation"; "the very easiness of the deed held her back" |
| ~ difficultness, difficulty | the quality of being difficult.; "they agreed about the difficulty of the climb" |
| ~ burnability, combustibility, combustibleness | the quality of being capable of igniting and burning. |
| ~ suitability, suitableness | the quality of having the properties that are right for a specific purpose.; "an important requirement is suitability for long trips" |
| ~ arability | the quality of land that is appropriate for cultivation. |
| ~ impressiveness | the quality of making a strong or vivid impression on the mind. |
| ~ navigability | the quality of being suitable for the passage of a ship or aircraft. |
| ~ neediness | the quality of needing attention and affection and reassurance to a marked degree.; "he recognized her neediness but had no time to respond to it" |
| ~ distressingness, painfulness | the quality of being painful.; "she feared the painfulness of childbirth" |
| ~ piquance, piquancy, piquantness | the quality of being agreeably stimulating or mentally exciting. |
| ~ publicity | the quality of being open to public view.; "the publicity of the court room" |
| ~ spinnability | the quality of being suitable for spinning or the capability of being spun (used of textile fibers). |
| ~ unsuitability, unsuitableness, ineptness | the quality of having the wrong properties for a specific purpose. |
| ~ protectiveness | the quality of providing protection.; "statistical evidence for the protectiveness of vaccination" |
| ~ nature | the essential qualities or characteristics by which something is recognized.; "it is the nature of fire to burn"; "the true nature of jealousy" |
| ~ humanness, humanity, manhood | the quality of being human.; "he feared the speedy decline of all manhood" |
| ~ air, aura, atmosphere | a distinctive but intangible quality surrounding a person or thing.; "an air of mystery"; "the house had a neglected air"; "an atmosphere of defeat pervaded the candidate's headquarters"; "the place had an aura of romance" |
| ~ excellence | the quality of excelling; possessing good qualities in high degree. |
| ~ ultimate | the finest or most superior quality of its kind.; "the ultimate in luxury" |
| ~ characteristic | a distinguishing quality. |
| ~ salability, salableness | the quality of being salable or marketable. |
| ~ changeability, changeableness | the quality of being changeable; having a marked tendency to change.; "the changeableness of the weather" |
| ~ unchangeability, unchangeableness, unchangingness, changelessness | the quality of being unchangeable; having a marked tendency to remain unchanged. |
| ~ sameness | the quality of being alike.; "sameness of purpose kept them together" |
| ~ difference | the quality of being unlike or dissimilar.; "there are many differences between jazz and rock" |
| ~ sure thing, certainty, foregone conclusion | something that is certain.; "his victory is a certainty" |
| ~ probability | the quality of being probable; a probable event or the most probable event.; "for a while mutiny seemed a probability"; "going by past experience there was a high probability that the visitors were lost" |
| ~ uncertainness, uncertainty, precariousness | being unsettled or in doubt or dependent on chance.; "the uncertainty of the outcome"; "the precariousness of his income" |
| ~ factuality, factualness | the quality of being actual or based on fact.; "the realm of factuality must be distinguished from the realm of imagination" |
| ~ counterfactuality | the quality of being contrary to fact. |
| ~ corporality, corporeality, physicalness, materiality | the quality of being physical; consisting of matter. |
| ~ incorporeality, immateriality | the quality of not being physical; not consisting of matter. |
| ~ particularity, specialness | the quality of being particular and pertaining to a specific case or instance.; "the particularity of human situations" |
| ~ generality | the quality of being general or widespread or having general applicability. |
| ~ simplicity, simpleness | the quality of being simple or uncompounded.; "the simplicity of a crystal" |
| ~ complexity, complexness | the quality of being intricate and compounded.; "he enjoyed the complexity of modern computers" |
| ~ regularity | the quality of being characterized by a fixed principle or rate.; "he was famous for the regularity of his habits" |
| ~ unregularity, irregularity | not characterized by a fixed principle or rate; at irregular intervals. |
| ~ mobility | the quality of moving freely. |
| ~ immobility | the quality of not moving. |
| ~ pleasantness, sweetness | the quality of giving pleasure.; "he was charmed by the sweetness of her manner"; "the pleasantness of a cool breeze on a hot summer day" |
| ~ unpleasantness | the quality of giving displeasure.; "the recent unpleasantness of the weather" |
| ~ believability, credibility, credibleness | the quality of being believable or trustworthy. |
| ~ incredibility, incredibleness | the quality of being incredible. |
| ~ logicality, logicalness | correct and valid reasoning. |
| ~ illogic, illogicality, illogicalness, inconsequence | invalid or incorrect reasoning. |
| ~ naturalness | the quality of being natural or based on natural principles.; "he accepted the naturalness of death"; "the spontaneous naturalness of his manner" |
| ~ unnaturalness | the quality of being unnatural or not based on natural principles. |
| ~ vertu, virtu | artistic quality. |
| ~ wholesomeness | the quality of being beneficial and generally good for you. |
| ~ unwholesomeness, morbidness, morbidity | the quality of being unhealthful and generally bad for you. |
| ~ satisfactoriness | the quality of giving satisfaction sufficient to meet a demand or requirement. |
| ~ unsatisfactoriness | the quality of being inadequate or unsuitable. |
| ~ ordinariness, mundaneness, mundanity | the quality of being commonplace and ordinary. |
| ~ extraordinariness | the quality of being extraordinary and not commonly encountered. |
| ~ ethnicity | an ethnic quality or affiliation resulting from racial or cultural ties.; "ethnicity has a strong influence on community status relations" |
| ~ foreignness, curiousness, strangeness | the quality of being alien or not native.; "the strangeness of a foreigner" |
| ~ nativeness | the quality of belonging to or being connected with a certain place or region by virtue of birth or origin. |
| ~ originality | the quality of being new and original (not derived from something else). |
| ~ unoriginality | the quality of being unoriginal. |
| ~ correctness, rightness | conformity to fact or truth. |
| ~ incorrectness, wrongness | the quality of not conforming to fact or truth. |
| ~ accuracy, truth | the quality of being near to the true value.; "he was beginning to doubt the accuracy of his compass"; "the lawyer questioned the truth of my account" |
| ~ accuracy | (mathematics) the number of significant figures given in a number.; "the atomic clock enabled scientists to measure time with much greater accuracy" |
| ~ inaccuracy | the quality of being inaccurate and having errors. |
| ~ distinction | a distinguishing quality.; "it has the distinction of being the cheapest restaurant in town" |
| ~ popularity | the quality of being widely admired or accepted or sought after.; "his charm soon won him affection and popularity"; "the universal popularity of American movies" |
| ~ unpopularity | the quality of lacking general approval or acceptance. |
| ~ lawfulness | the quality of conforming to law. |
| ~ unlawfulness | the quality of failing to conform to law. |
| ~ elegance | a refined quality of gracefulness and good taste.; "she conveys an aura of elegance and gentility" |
| ~ elegance | a quality of neatness and ingenious simplicity in the solution of a problem (especially in science or mathematics).; "the simplicity and elegance of his invention" |
| ~ inelegance | the quality of lacking refinement and good taste. |
| ~ urbanity | the quality or character of life in a city or town.; "there is an important difference between rusticity and urbanity" |
| ~ comprehensibility, understandability | the quality of comprehensible language or thought. |
| ~ expressiveness | the quality of being expressive. |
| ~ incomprehensibility | the quality of being incomprehensible. |
| ~ humaneness | the quality of compassion or consideration for others (people or animals). |
| ~ inhumaneness, inhumanity | the quality of lacking compassion or consideration for others. |
| ~ morality | concern with the distinction between good and evil or right and wrong; right or good conduct. |
| ~ immorality | the quality of not being in accord with standards of right or good conduct.; "the immorality of basing the defense of the West on the threat of mutual assured destruction" |
| ~ amorality | the quality of being amoral. |
| ~ divinity | the quality of being divine.; "ancient Egyptians believed in the divinity of the Pharaohs" |
| ~ holiness, sanctitude, sanctity | the quality of being holy. |
| ~ ideality | the quality of being ideal. |
| ~ unholiness | the quality of being unholy. |
| ~ parental quality | a quality appropriate to a parent. |
| ~ faithfulness, fidelity | the quality of being faithful. |
| ~ infidelity, unfaithfulness | the quality of being unfaithful. |
| ~ mundaneness, mundanity, worldliness, sophistication | the quality or character of being intellectually sophisticated and worldly through cultivation or experience or disillusionment. |
| ~ naiveness, naivete, naivety | lack of sophistication or worldliness. |
| ~ hardness | a quality of water that contains dissolved mineral salts that prevent soap from lathering.; "the costs of reducing hardness depend on the relative amounts of calcium and magnesium compounds that are present" |
| ~ penetrability, perviousness | the quality of being penetrable (by people or light or missiles etc.). |
| ~ impenetrability, imperviousness | the quality of being impenetrable (by people or light or missiles etc.). |
| ~ soapiness | the quality of being soap or being covered with soap.; "she could smell the soapiness of the doctor's hands" |
| ~ fibrosity, fibrousness | the quality of being fibrous. |
| ~ directiveness, directivity | the quality of being directive. |
| ~ extremeness | the quality of being extreme. |
| ~ closeness, stuffiness | the quality of being close and poorly ventilated. |
| ~ adequacy, sufficiency | the quality of being sufficient for the end in view.; "he questioned the sufficiency of human intelligence" |
| ~ worth | the quality that renders something desirable or valuable or useful. |
| ~ worthlessness, ineptitude | having no qualities that would render it valuable or useful.; "the drill sergeant's intent was to convince all the recruits of their worthlessness" |
| ~ goodness, good | that which is pleasing or valuable or useful.; "weigh the good against the bad"; "among the highest goods of all are happiness and self-realization" |
| ~ bad, badness | that which is below standard or expectations as of ethics or decency.; "take the bad with the good" |
| ~ fruitfulness, fecundity | the quality of something that causes or assists healthy growth. |
| ~ aridity, barrenness, fruitlessness | the quality of yielding nothing of value. |
| ~ usefulness, utility | the quality of being of practical use. |
| ~ inutility, unusefulness, uselessness | the quality of having no practical use. |
| ~ asset, plus | a useful or valuable quality. |
| ~ constructiveness | the quality of serving to build or improve. |
| ~ destructiveness | the quality of causing destruction. |
| ~ positiveness, positivism, positivity | a quality or state characterized by certainty or acceptance or affirmation and dogmatic assertiveness. |
| ~ negativism, negativeness, negativity | characterized by habitual skepticism and a disagreeable tendency to deny or oppose or resist suggestions or commands. |
| ~ occidentalism | the quality or customs or mannerisms characteristic of Western civilizations. |
| ~ orientalism | the quality or customs or mannerisms characteristic of Asian civilizations.; "orientalisms can be found in Mozart's operas" |
| ~ power, powerfulness | possession of controlling influence.; "the deterrent power of nuclear weapons"; "the power of his love saved her"; "his powerfulness was concealed by a gentle facade" |
| ~ ability | the quality of being able to perform; a quality that permits or facilitates achievement or accomplishment. |
| ~ impotence, impotency, powerlessness | the quality of lacking strength or power; being weak and feeble. |
| ~ inability, unfitness | lacking the power to perform. |
| ~ romance, romanticism | an exciting and mysterious quality (as of a heroic time or adventure). |
| ~ domesticity | the quality of being domestic or domesticated.; "a royal family living in unpretentious domesticity" |
| ~ boundlessness, infiniteness, limitlessness, unboundedness, infinitude | the quality of being infinite; without bound or limit. |
| ~ boundedness, finiteness, finitude | the quality of being finite. |
| ~ measurability, quantifiability | the quality of being measurable. |
| ~ solubility | the quality of being soluble and easily dissolved in liquid. |
| ~ insolubility | the quality of being insoluble and difficult to dissolve in liquid. |
| ~ stuff | unspecified qualities required to do or be something.; "the stuff of heros"; "you don't have the stuff to be a United States Marine" |
| ~ hot stuff, voluptuousness | the quality of being attractive and exciting (especially sexually exciting).; "he thought she was really hot stuff" |
| ~ humor, humour | the quality of being funny.; "I fail to see the humor in it" |
| ~ pathos, poignancy | a quality that arouses emotions (especially pity or sorrow).; "the film captured all the pathos of their situation" |
| ~ tone | the quality of something (an act or a piece of writing) that reveals the attitudes and presuppositions of the author.; "the general tone of articles appearing in the newspapers is that the government should withdraw"; "from the tone of her behavior I gathered that I had outstayed my welcome" |
| ~ brachycephalism, brachycephaly | the quality of being brachycephalic. |
| ~ dolichocephalism, dolichocephaly | the quality of being dolichocephalic. |
| ~ relativity | the quality of being relative and having significance only in relation to something else. |
| ~ responsiveness | the quality of being responsive; reacting quickly; as a quality of people, it involves responding with emotion to people and events. |
| ~ deadness, unresponsiveness | the quality of being unresponsive; not reacting; as a quality of people, it is marked by a failure to respond quickly or with emotion to people or events.; "she began to recover from her numb unresponsiveness after the accident"; "in an instant all the deadness and withdrawal were wiped away" |
| ~ subjectivism | the quality of being subjective. |
| ~ snootiness | the quality of being snooty.; "he disliked his neighbors' snootiness" |
| ~ ulteriority | the quality of being ulterior.; "their conversation was limited to ulteriorities"; "a terrible feeling of ulteriority"; "his stories were too susceptible to ulteriority" |
| ~ memorability | the quality of being worth remembering.; "continuous change results in lack of memorability"; "true memorability of phrase" |
| ~ woodiness, woodsiness | the quality of abounding in trees. |
| ~ waxiness | the quality of being made of wax or covered with wax. |
| n. (attribute) | 2. caliber, calibre, quality | a degree or grade of excellence or worth.; "the quality of students has risen"; "an executive of low caliber" |
| ~ high quality, superiority | the quality of being superior. |
| ~ low quality, inferiority | an inferior quality. |
| ~ degree, level, grade | a position on a scale of intensity or amount or quality.; "a moderate grade of intelligence"; "a high level of care is required"; "it is all a matter of degree" |
| n. (cognition) | 3. character, lineament, quality | a characteristic property that defines the apparent individual nature of something.; "each town has a quality all its own"; "the radical character of our demands" |
| ~ attribute, dimension, property | a construct whereby objects or individuals can be distinguished.; "self-confidence is not an endearing property" |
| ~ texture | the essential quality of something.; "the texture of Neapolitan life" |
| n. (attribute) | 4. quality, timber, timbre, tone | (music) the distinctive property of a complex sound (a voice or noise or musical sound).; "the timbre of her soprano was rich and lovely"; "the muffled tones of the broken bell summoned them to meet" |
| ~ sound property | an attribute of sound. |
| ~ harmonic | any of a series of musical tones whose frequencies are integral multiples of the frequency of a fundamental. |
| ~ resonance | the quality imparted to voiced speech sounds by the action of the resonating chambers of the throat and mouth and nasal cavities. |
| ~ coloration, colouration, color, colour | the timbre of a musical sound.; "the recording fails to capture the true color of the original music" |
| ~ nasality | a quality of the voice that is produced by nasal resonators. |
| ~ plangency, reverberance, sonority, sonorousness, vibrancy, resonance, ringing | having the character of a loud deep sound; the quality of being resonant. |
| ~ stridence, stridency, shrillness | having the timbre of a loud high-pitched sound. |
| ~ register | (music) the timbre that is characteristic of a certain range and manner of production of the human voice or of different pipe organ stops or of different musical instruments. |
| ~ music | an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner. |
| n. (state) | 5. quality | high social status.; "a man of quality" |
| ~ social rank, social station, social status, rank | position in a social hierarchy.; "the British are more aware of social status than Americans are" |
| adj. | 6. choice, prime, prize, quality, select | of superior grade.; "choice wines"; "prime beef"; "prize carnations"; "quality paper"; "select peaches" |
| ~ superior | of high or superior quality or performance.; "superior wisdom derived from experience"; "superior math students" |
| adj. | 7. quality | of high social status.; "people of quality"; "a quality family" |
| ~ upper-class | occupying the highest socioeconomic position in a society. |
| type | | |
| n. (cognition) | 1. type | a subdivision of a particular kind of thing.; "what type of sculpture do you prefer?" |
| ~ kind, sort, form, variety | a category of things distinguished by some common characteristic or quality.; "sculpture is a form of art"; "what kinds of desserts are there?" |
| ~ breed | a special type.; "Google represents a new breed of entrepreneurs" |
| ~ nature | a particular type of thing.; "problems of this type are very difficult to solve"; "he's interested in trains and things of that nature"; "matters of a personal nature" |
| ~ version, edition, variant, variation | something a little different from others of the same type.; "an experimental version of the night fighter"; "a variant of the same word"; "an emery wheel is the modern variation of a grindstone"; "the boy is a younger edition of his father" |
| n. (person) | 2. case, character, eccentric, type | a person of a specified kind (usually with many eccentricities).; "a real character"; "a strange character"; "a friendly eccentric"; "the capable type"; "a mental case" |
| ~ adult, grownup | a fully developed person from maturity onward. |
| n. (group) | 3. type | (biology) the taxonomic group whose characteristics are used to define the next higher taxon. |
| ~ biological science, biology | the science that studies living organisms. |
| ~ taxon, taxonomic category, taxonomic group | animal or plant group having natural relations. |
| n. (communication) | 4. type | printed characters.; "small type is hard to read" |
| ~ grapheme, graphic symbol, character | a written symbol that is used to represent speech.; "the Greek alphabet has 24 characters" |
| ~ type family | a complete set of type suitable for printing text. |
| ~ font, fount, typeface, face, case | a specific size and style of type within a type family. |
| n. (communication) | 5. type | all of the tokens of the same symbol.; "the word `element' contains five different types of character" |
| ~ symbol | an arbitrary sign (written or printed) that has acquired a conventional significance. |
| n. (artifact) | 6. type | a small metal block bearing a raised character on one end; produces a printed character when inked and pressed on paper.; "he dropped a case of type, so they made him pick them up" |
| ~ block | a solid piece of something (usually having flat rectangular sides).; "the pyramids were built with large stone blocks" |
| ~ kern | the part of a metal typeface that projects beyond its body. |
| ~ quad, space | (printing) a block of type without a raised letter; used for spacing between words or sentences. |
| v. (communication) | 7. type, typewrite | write by means of a keyboard with types.; "type the acceptance letter, please" |
| ~ write | communicate or express by writing.; "Please write to me every week" |
| ~ shift | use a shift key on a keyboard.; "She could not shift so all her letters are written in lower case" |
| ~ backspace | hit the backspace key on a computer or typewriter keyboard.; "To erase, you must backspace" |
| ~ double-space | type with a full space between lines. |
| ~ triple-space | type with two empty spaces between lines. |
| ~ touch-type | type without looking at the keyboard. |
| v. (cognition) | 8. type, typecast | identify as belonging to a certain type.; "Such people can practically be typed" |
| ~ identify | consider to be equal or the same.; "He identified his brother as one of the fugitives" |
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