| classic |
Of the highest class; being a model of its kind; or of having a style that is balanced, formal, objective, restrained, regular, simple, etc.
Ãâó: www.svsu.edu/mfsm/educational/glosstrmhs.html
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|---|---|
| classic |
Movies/scenes filmed before 1990. Also starring classic actors/actresses.
Ãâó: www.24houradultdvd.com/category.htm
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| classic |
An early issue, often with a connotation of rarity, although classic stamps are not necessarily rare. A particularly scarce recent item may be referred to as a modern classic.
Ãâó: www.vistastamps.com/glossary1.html
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| class |
Rating scale of river difficulty. Scale ranges from Class I (easiest) to Class VI (most difficult or unrunnable). The scale is general and can be slightly subjective.
Ãâó: www.outdoorplay.com/headlines/help_glossary.html
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| class |
A relative term that implies one horse is superior to another.
Ãâó: www.scigames.com/sgcorp/glossary.asp
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| class | an adjective that classifies its noun (e.g., `a nervous disease' or `a musical instrument') |
|---|---|
| class | favoring social equality |
| class | an acquaintance that you go to school with |
| class | a room in a school where lessons take place |
| class | a school task requiring considerable effort |
| class | (informal) elegant and fashionable |
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