classification / ˌklæs ə fɪˈkeɪ ʃən /

⭐基础词汇分类分级分类法分类方法

classification 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the act of classifying.
  2. the result of classifying or being classified.
  3. one of the groups or classes into which things may be or have been classified.
  4. Biology. the assignment of organisms to groups within a system of categories distinguished by structure, origin, etc. The usual series of categories is phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, and variety.
  5. the category, as restricted, confidential, secret, or top secret, to which information, a document, etc., is assigned, as by a government or military agency, based on the degree of protection considered necessary to safeguard it from unauthorized use.
  6. Library Science. any of various systems for arranging books and other materials, especially according to subject or format.

classification 近义词

n. 名词 noun

categorization

更多classification例句

  1. This week, we’re looking at the latest developments in the battle over the classification of gig workers, the rise of labor unions in tech and and Instagram’s latest move to be woke.
  2. It would soon become clear that this classification was, at best, misleading.
  3. Mathematicians pursue this classification with “cohomology” theories, which allow them to extract algebraic fingerprints from complicated geometric spaces.
  4. These two companies have been sued many, many times for their labor practices, specifically as they pertain to the classification of their respective drivers as independent contractors.
  5. These classifications may be revisited if a sponsor ceases engaging in this behavior.
  6. Yet much of the best new music defies genre classification; great artists take chances and cross boundaries.
  7. Still, Wallace said that no one at the meeting involving Fearey, which he also attended, raised classification concerns.
  8. “The classification system, of course, is not supposed to be used for political purposes,” Bunn said.
  9. But Doyle said Fearey never raised any concerns about classification.
  10. Lambic represents the parent classification for a host of sub-categories.
  11. His hero, Gulliver, discovers race after race of beings who typify the genera in his classification of mankind.
  12. In addition to the tolls and charges, the Acts usually contained a rough classification of goods to which they applied.
  13. When the child entered the workhouse it passed out of its former classification and entered into an entirely different one.
  14. By 1860 it "had given instructions that every new workhouse should be so constructed as to allow of the requisite classification."
  15. In some later writers on music we find this classification reduced to a more regular form, and clothed in technical language.