GRADE vs CLASS: NOUN
- A crossing at grade.
- See under Equate.
- An ascent, as on a graded railroad.
- A descent, as on a graded railroad.
- On the same level; -- said of the crossing of a railroad with another railroad or a highway, when they are on the same level at the point of crossing.
- The result of crossing a native stock with some better breed. If the crossbreed have more than three fourths of the better blood, it is called high grade.
- A graded ascending, descending, or level portion of a road; a gradient.
- The rate of ascent or descent; gradient; deviation from a level surface to an inclined plane; -- usually stated as so many feet per mile, or as one foot rise or fall in so many of horizontal distance; ; a grade of twenty feet per mile, or of 1 in 264.
- A step or degree in any series, rank, quality, order; relative position or standing
- In philol., one of the positions or forms assumed by a vowel or root in a series of phonetic changes caused primarily by change of stress and other factors, as the vowels in English sing, sang, sung, ride, rode, ridden, etc., Latin capio, cepi, -cipio, etc., Greek √λειπ, √λιπ, √λοιπ, leave, √τεμ, √ταμ, √τομ, cut, etc.
- A small difference between the brightness of two stars: substantially the same as a step: a term used by observers of variable stars.
- In trigonometry, in the centesimal system, the hundredth part of a right angle: also, the hundredth part of a quadrant.
- An animal, particularly a cow or bull or a sheep, resulting from a cross between a parent of pure blood and one that is not pure-bred: as, an Aldevney grade. [Also used as an adjective.]
- In zoölogical classification, any group or series of animals, with reference to their earlier or later branching off from the stem or stock from which they are presumed to have evolved.
- In a road or railroad, the degree of inclination from the horizontal; also, a part of such a road inclined from the horizontal. It is expressed in degrees, in feet per mile, or as a foot in a certain distance.
- A step, degree, or rank in any series or order; relative position or standing as regards quantity, quality, office, etc.
- A domestic animal produced by crossbreeding one of purebred stock with one of ordinary stock.
- The level at which the ground surface meets the foundation of a building.
- A slope or gradual inclination, especially of a road or railroad track.
- The degree of inclination of a slope, road, or other surface.
- A military, naval, or civil service rank.
- A number, letter, or symbol indicating a student's level of accomplishment.
- Elementary school.
- A group of students at such a level.
- A level of academic development in an elementary, middle, or secondary school.
- A set of persons or things all falling in the same specified limits; a class.
- An accepted level or standard.
- A position in a scale of size, quality, or intensity.
- A stage or degree in a process.
- A body of students who are taught together
- One-hundredth of a right angle
- A number or letter indicating quality (especially of a student's performance)
- A position on a scale of intensity or amount or quality
- A relative position or degree of value in a graded group
- A degree of ablaut
- The height of the ground on which something stands
- The gradient of a slope or road or other surface
- A variety of cattle produced by crossbreeding with a superior breed
- A group, collection, category or set sharing characteristics or attributes.
- A meeting of a class under the charge of a class leader, for counsel and relegious instruction.
- The kind of a curve as expressed by the number of tangents that can be drawn from any point to the curve. A circle is of the second class.
- A high degree of elegance, in dress or behavior; the quality of bearing oneself with dignity, grace, and social adeptness.
- One session of formal instruction in which one or more teachers instruct a group on some subject. The class may be one of a course of classes, or a single special session.
- One of the sections into which a church or congregation is divided, and which is under the supervision of a class leader.
- A set; a kind or description, species or variety.
- A comprehensive division of animate or inanimate objects, grouped together on account of their common characteristics, in any classification in natural science, and subdivided into orders, families, tribes, genera, etc.
- A number of students in a school or college, of the same standing, or pursuing the same studies.
- A group of individuals ranked together as possessing common characteristics.
- In crystallog., one of the thirty-two groups in which crystals are divided in accordance with the special type of symmetry which characterizes them. See symmetry.
- The indication of the size and power of any given type of war-ship: as, a first-class battle-ship, a first-, second-, or third-class cruiser, etc.
- In shipbuilding, the indication of the character, style of construction, and quality of workmanship and outfit of a merchant vessel, as determined by the rules and inspection of a registration society. The class to which a vessel is assigned is indicated in the register of each society by a conventional character such as 100A, 90A, etc. See A, 2 .
- In petrography, in the quantitative classification of igneous rocks (see rock), the highest division.
- In geometry, the degree of a locus of planes; a division of algebraical loci bearing an ordinal number showing how many planes there are incident to the locus and passing through each line of Space.
- In natural history, a group of plants or animals next in rank above the order or superorder, and commonly formed by the union of several orders or superorders: but it may be represented by a single species. See classification.
- A number of objects distinguished by common characters from all others, and regarded as a collective unit or group; a collection capable of a general definition; a kind.
- Any body of persons grouped together by particular circumstances or for particular reasons.
- An order or rank of persons; a number of persons having certain characteristics in common, as equality in rank, intellectual influence, education, property, occupation, habits of life, etc.
- In anc. hist., one of the five divisions of the Roman citizens made, according to their wealth, by Servius Tullius, for purposes of taxation: a sixth division comprised those whose possessions fell below the minimum of the census.
- A collection of sets whose members share a specified property.
- A group of words belonging to the same grammatical category that share a particular set of morphological properties, such as a set of inflections.
- An interval in a frequency distribution.
- A taxonomic category ranking below a phylum or division and above an order.
- A group of students or alumni who have the same year of graduation.
- The subject material taught to or studied by such a group.
- The period during which such a group meets.
- A group of students who are taught together, usually at a regularly scheduled time and in the same subject.
- Elegance of style, taste, and manner.
- Social rank or caste, especially high rank.
- A social stratum whose members share certain economic, social, or cultural characteristics.
- A quality of accommodation on public transport.
- A grade of mail.
- A division based on quality, rank, or grade, as.
- A set, collection, group, or configuration containing members regarded as having certain attributes or traits in common; a kind or category.
- Education imparted in a series of lessons or class meetings
- A league ranked by quality
- A body of students who graduate together
- A body of students who are taught together
- (biology) a taxonomic group containing one or more orders
- A collection of things sharing a common attribute
- People having the same social or economic status
- Elegance in dress or behavior
GRADE vs CLASS: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Exhibiting refinement and high character. Opposite of low-class
GRADE vs CLASS: VERB
- Assign a rank or rating to
- Level to the right gradient
- Assign a grade or rank to, according to one's evaluation
- Determine the grade of or assign a grade to
- Arrange or order by classes or categories
GRADE vs CLASS: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To change or progress gradually.
- To improve the quality of (livestock) by crossbreeding with purebred stock.
- To gradate.
- To level or smooth to a desired or horizontal gradient.
- To give a grade to (a student, for example).
- To determine the quality of (academic work, for example); evaluate.
- To arrange in grades; sort or classify.
- To be grouped or classed.
GRADE vs CLASS: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To cross with some better breed; to improve the blood of.
- To reduce to a level, or to an evenly progressive ascent, as the line of a canal or road.
- To arrange in order, steps, or degrees, according to size, quality, rank, etc.
- To divide into classes, as students; to form into, or place in, a class or classes.
- To arrange in classes; to classify or refer to some class.
- To arrange, group, or rate according to qualities or characteristics; assign to a class; classify.
GRADE vs CLASS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To improve the breed of. as common stock, by crossing with animals of pure blood.
- To reduce, as the line of a canal, road, or railway, to such levels or degrees of inclination as may make it suitable for being used.
- To sort out or arrange in order according to size, quality, rank, degree of advancement, etc.: as, to grade fruit, wheat, or sugar; to grade the children of a school.
- To prove to be of a certain grade or quality.
- In philology to alter or be altered by gradation or ablaut.
- In physical geography, to develop by eroding or filling (degrading or aggrading) into an even slope on which an eroding and transporting agent (such as a stream) will not actively build up or wear down its course.
- Same as graith.
- People having the same social, economic, or educational status
- To be arranged or classed.
- To place in ranks or divisions, as students that are pursuing the same studies; form into a class or classes, as in an educational institution.
- To arrange in a class or classes; rank together; regard as constituting a class; refer to a class or group; classify; range.
- Of classification.
- An abbreviation of classic or classical
- To be assigned to a class. See I., 3.
- In shipbuilding, to assign to a class of a registration society, such as Lloyd's: said of a merchant vessel. A vessel not classed is one which has not been inspected and assigned a class by any registration society, or the classification of which has been refused for some reason, not necessarily involving deterioration or inferior quality.
GRADE vs CLASS: RELATED WORDS
- Order, Mark, Improved, Form, Surface, Rate, Range, Place, Grad, Score, Rank, Degree, Level, Tier, Class
- Social class, Course of study, Course of instruction, Classify, Assort, Separate, Sort out, Sort, Form, Year, Family, Division, Course, Category, Grade
GRADE vs CLASS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Order, Mark, Improved, Form, Surface, Rate, Range, Place, Grad, Score, Rank, Degree, Level, Tier, Class
- Tier, Social class, Course of study, Classify, Assort, Separate, Sort out, Sort, Form, Year, Family, Division, Course, Category, Grade
GRADE vs CLASS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Grade Lowthe lowest grade level of students that can be assigned to thisteacher.
- Rhode Island Grade student work offering constructive feedback and maintain grade book.
- The following recommendations are specific to surgery grade and ASA grade.
- Your final grade in the course will be a letter grade.
- There were more grade III and less grade II toxicities.
- Enter your course grade in the Grade section.
- See more ideas about First grade, Grade, Words.
- Circle graphs math quiz for kids, interpreting circle graphs for children in third grade, fourth grade and fifth grade.
- Official scores are then converted into a project grade, and the project grade is calculated into the final student teaching grade.
- Simply enter in your current NYU grade, your desired final grade and what percentage of your grade that the final exam is worth.
- Express Entry Federal Skilled Worker Class Federal Skilled Trades Class Canadian Experience Class.
- The self keyword in an abstract class will refer to the abstract class itself, not the extending class no matter what.
- Find more Class A, Class C, Class B, trailers, fifth wheel trailers and more at Outdoorsy!
- Whether you fly Economy Class, Business Class, or First Class, fly with us for a great way to travel.
- We are defining the class person as Abstract class because it provides interface for the class student and professor.
- With the proper endorsements, your CDL Class A may also allow you to drive some Class B and Class C vehicles.
- Class M, Class B or Class R Certificate.
- Class A, Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares.
- Class A, Class B, Class C, or Class D, depending on their size.
- Class options include a Fried Noodles Class, Dumplings Class, Potstickers Class, Dim Sum Class, and Kung Pao Chicken Class.
GRADE vs CLASS: QUESTIONS
- How do I make grade changes in the grade change system?
- Can a student use grade replacement for an F grade?
- Which is nutral, solvent grade or molecular grade isopropyl alcohol?
- Is nuclear pleomorphism Grade 2 the same as Grade 1?
- How does Yolanda grade assignments in grade it now mode?
- What grade/grade level is the book athlete appropriate for?
- Where does the 7th grade attend Gardner grade school?
- Why 3rd grade math worksheets Grade 3 are important?
- What is the grade percentage for EZ GRADE criteria?
- What makes a cable "medical grade" or "hospital grade"?
- Is there any constructor chaining from inner class to outer class?
- Can you upgrade from business class to first class on airlines?
- How do you access the inner class of a nested class?
- Can a static class be instantiated without instantiating its outer class?
- Which class is the Super class for all user defined classes?
- Can a class inherit from another class in Visual Basic?
- What is the difference of upper class and lower class?
- What are Minnesota's Class I and Class II railroads?
- Do flight attendants prefer first-class or business class?
- What is a Class 1 Class I Class I flammable liquids?