| class |
a collection of entities satisfying a condition for membership in the class. To avoid problems arising if classes get too large, or belong to other classes, or are not completed, set theory distinguishes classes from sets.
Ãâó: www.filosofia.net/materiales/rec/glosaen.htm
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|---|---|
| class |
Options of the same type (ie, either puts or calls, but not both) covering the same underlying futures contract or other asset (eg, a March call with a strike price of 62 and a May call with a strike price of 58).
Ãâó: www.cftc.gov/opa/glossary/opaglossary_c.htm
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| classification |
An organization of library materials by a hierarchy of subject categories.
Ãâó: www.cs.cornell.edu/wya/DigLib/MS1999/glossary.html
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| classic |
A Classic Tabby pattern, also known as Blotched or Marbled Tabby.
Ãâó: www.flippyscatpage.com/glossary.html
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| classification |
Arrangement of artifacts, species, etc., into categories.
Ãâó: www.digonsite.com/glossary/ag.html
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| CLAS | ctenophores lacking tentacles |
|---|---|
| CLAS | earthworms |
| CLAS | enigmatic small elongated wormlike terrestrial invertebrates of damp dark habitats in warm regions |
| CLAS | nonphotosynthetic fungi that resemble algae and that reproduce by forming oospores |
| CLAS | brittle stars and basket stars |
| CLAS | a class of fish having a skeleton composed of bone in addition to cartilage |
| CLAS | an obscure class of minute arthropods with branched antennae and 8 to 10 pairs of legs |
| CLAS | oysters |
| CLAS | a regularly scheduled session as part of a course of study |
| CLAS | brown algae |
| CLAS | one of two subgroups of Nematoda used in some classification systems |
| CLAS | most conifers: in some systems classified as a class (Pinopsida) and in others as a subdivision (Pinophytina) |
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