class
1 Americannoun
-
a number of persons or things regarded as forming a group by reason of common attributes, characteristics, qualities, or traits; kind; sort.
a class of objects used in daily living.
-
a group of students meeting regularly to study a subject under the guidance of a teacher.
The class had arrived on time for the lecture.
-
the period during which a group of students meets for instruction.
-
a meeting of a group of students for instruction.
-
a classroom.
-
a number of pupils in a school, or of students in a college, pursuing the same studies, ranked together, or graduated in the same year.
She graduated from Ohio State, class of '72.
-
a social stratum sharing basic economic, political, or cultural characteristics, and having the same social position.
Artisans form a distinct class in some societies.
-
the system of dividing society; caste.
-
social rank, especially high rank.
-
the members of a given group in society, regarded as a single entity.
-
any division of persons or things according to rank or grade.
Hotels were listed by class, with the most luxurious ones listed first.
-
excellence; exceptional merit.
She's a good performer, but she lacks class.
-
Hinduism. any of the four social divisions, the Brahman, Kshatriya, Vaisya, and Shudra, of Hindu society; varna.
-
Informal. elegance, grace, or dignity, as in dress and behavior.
He may be a slob, but his brother has real class.
-
any of several grades of accommodations available on ships, airplanes, and the like.
We bought tickets for first class.
-
Informal. the best or among the best of its kind.
This new plane is the class of the wide-bodied airliners.
-
Biology. the usual major subdivision of a phylum or division in the classification of organisms, usually consisting of several orders.
-
British University. any of three groups into which candidates for honors degrees are divided according to merit on the basis of final examinations.
-
drafted or conscripted soldiers, or persons available for draft or conscription, all of whom were born in the same year.
-
Grammar. form class.
-
Ecclesiastical. classis.
-
(in early Methodism) one of several small companies, each composed of about 12 members under a leader, into which each society or congregation was divided.
-
Statistics. a group of measurements that fall within a specified interval.
-
Mathematics. a set; a collection.
-
the classes, the higher ranks of society, as distinguished from the masses.
adjective
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
verb phrase
abbreviation
-
classic.
-
classical.
-
classification.
-
classified.
noun
-
a collection or division of people or things sharing a common characteristic, attribute, quality, or property
-
a group of persons sharing a similar social position and certain economic, political, and cultural characteristics
-
(in Marxist theory) a group of persons sharing the same relationship to the means of production
-
-
the pattern of divisions that exist within a society on the basis of rank, economic status, etc
-
( as modifier )
the class struggle
class distinctions
-
-
-
a group of pupils or students who are taught and study together
-
a meeting of a group of students for tuition
-
-
a group of students who graduated in a specified year
the class of '53
-
(in combination and as modifier) a grade of attainment in a university honours degree
second-class honours
-
one of several standards of accommodation in public transport See also first class second class third class
-
-
informal excellence or elegance, esp in dress, design, or behaviour
that girl's got class
-
( as modifier )
a class act
-
-
-
outstanding speed and stamina in a racehorse
-
( as modifier )
the class horse in the race
-
-
biology any of the taxonomic groups into which a phylum is divided and which contains one or more orders. Amphibia, Reptilia, and Mammalia are three classes of phylum Chordata
-
maths logic
-
another name for set 2
-
a class which cannot itself be a member of other classes
-
-
unequalled; unparalleled
verb
-
A taxonomic category of organisms ranking above an order and below a phylum or division. In modern taxonomic schemes, the names of classes end in –phyceae for the various groups of algae, –mycetes for fungi, and –opsida for plants (as in Liliopsida, the class of plants also termed monocotyledons). The names of classes belonging to phyla of the animal kingdom, however, are formed in various ways, as Osteichthyes the bony fishes, Aves, the birds, and Mammalia, the mammals, all of which are classes belonging to the subphylum Vertebrata (the vertebrates) in the phylum Chordata.
-
See Table at taxonomy
Grammar
See collective noun.
Discover More
Mammals, reptiles, and insects are classes.
Other Word Forms
- classable adjective
- classer noun
- misclass verb
- reclass verb (used with object)
- unclassable adjective
- unclassed adjective
- well-classed adjective
Etymology
Origin of class
First recorded in 1590–1600; earlier classis, plural classes, from Latin: “class, division, fleet, army”; singular class back formation from plural
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
It says KPop Forever! will "take audiences on a journey that they will never forget with four epic live vocalists, accompanied by four world class dancers amidst a background of eye-popping lighting and effects".
From BBC
Machine-learning tools compared those signatures with an extensive chemical database, allowing the team to identify 169 chemicals spanning nine major structural classes.
From Science Daily
The newly identified genomes also revealed previously unknown protein groups, doubling the number of recognized enzymatic classes within these microbes.
From Science Daily
Its sole school has been classed by officials as being in a state of emergency, with some walls at risk of collapse.
From BBC
At the time, Iranians across social classes and political divides, inside and outside the country, united under the leadership of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.