| classic |
Used to refer to a few traditionally significant races, such as the Kentucky Derby. In America, the classic distance is 11/4 miles; in Europe it is 11/2 miles.
Ãâó: www.runhorse.com/popular_horse_racing_terms.htm
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| classification |
A classification is the separation or ordering of objects (or specimens) into classes [WEBOL 1998]. Classifications that are created non-empirically are called a priori classifications [...; Simpson 1961; WEBOL 1998]. Classifications that are created empirically by looking at the data are called a posteriori classifications [...; Simpson 1961; WEBOL 1998]. [11]
Ãâó: www.ee.oulu.fi/research/ouspg/sage/glossary/
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| classification |
formal established classification schemes ?for example, the Dewey Decimal Classification (DC) and Library of Congress Classification (LC) ?that use a notation to describe classes of information.
Ãâó: members.optusnet.com.au/~webindexing/Webbook2Ed/gl...
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| classification |
a medical emergency classification procedure for patients that is applicable under conditions encountered at the site of a medical emergency
Ãâó: www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/ems/emstraumasyste...
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| classic |
The word means 'of the first class' and was first applied to the civilisation of anceint Greece and Rome. It then came to include renaissance art and is now used for anything of good quality 'eg a classic left jab'.
Ãâó: www.gardenvisit.com/glossary/glossary.htm
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| CLAS | a former classification |
|---|---|
| CLAS | coelenterates in which the polyp stage is absent or at least inconspicuous: jellyfishes |
| CLAS | horsetails and related forms |
| CLAS | strictly parasitic protozoans that are usually immobile |
| CLAS | the organization of classes within a society |
| CLAS | conflict between social or economic classes (especially between the capitalist and proletariat classes) |
| CLAS | small class of minute arthropods |
| CLAS | 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 needle-like piercing organs connected with the pharynx |
| CLAS | 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 |
| CLAS | ctenophores have retractile tentacles |
| CLAS | small class of free-swimming tunicates |
| CLAS | category used in some systems to comprise the two orders Ustilaginales (smuts) and Uredinales (rusts) |
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