'A primary school.'에 대한 English 단어
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noun
- A primary school.
- The first year of grade school.
- (aviation) A radar return from an aircraft (or other object) produced solely by the reflection of the radar beam from the aircraft's skin, without additional information from the aircraft's transponder.
- The most massive component of a gravitationally bound system, such as a planet in relation to its satellites.
- (military) The first stage of a thermonuclear weapon, which sets off a fission explosion to help trigger a fusion reaction in the weapon's secondary stage.
- A primary colour.
- (ornithology) Any flight feather attached to the manus (hand) of a bird.
- (electronics) A directly driven inductive coil, as in a transformer or induction motor that is magnetically coupled to a secondary.
- A base or fundamental component; something that is irreducible.
- (medicine) The primary site of a disease; the original location or source of the disease.
- (political science) A primary election; a preliminary election to select a political candidate of a political party, or the first round of a two-round election.
- one of the main flight feathers projecting along the outer edge of a bird's wing
- coil forming the part of an electrical circuit such that changing current in it induces a current in a neighboring circuit
- a preliminary election where delegates or nominees are chosen
- (astronomy) a celestial body (especially a star) relative to other objects in orbit around it
adj
- (medicine) Relating to day-to-day care provided by health professionals such as nurses, general practitioners, dentists etc.
- (medicine) Relating to the place where a disorder or disease started to occur.
- (chemistry) Illustrating, possessing, or characterized by, some quality or property in the first degree; having undergone the first stage of substitution or replacement.
- (geology) Earliest formed; fundamental.
- First or earliest in a group or series.
- Main; principal; chief; placed ahead of others.
- not derived from or reducible to something else; basic
- of first rank or importance or value; direct and immediate rather than secondary
- most important element
- of or being the essential or basic part
verb
- (US, politics, transitive, intransitive) To challenge (an incumbent sitting politician) for their political party's nomination to run for re-election, through running a challenger campaign in a primary election, especially one that is more ideologically extreme.
- (US, intransitive, transitive) To take part in a primary election.
noun
adj
- Relating to an elementary school.
- (sciences) Fundamental: serving as a building block for more complicated structures or processes.
- (mathematics, of a square matrix) Which performs a row or column operation on another matrix when the two are multiplied; see Elementary matrix on Wikipedia.Wikipedia (Such matrices are called "elementary" because they generate the general linear group).
- (mathematics, of an argument or proof) Straightforward, employing only basic techniques; not requiring substantial knowledge (of some particular domain, object, etc.).
- (mathematics, of a symmetric polynomial) Arising from Vieta's formulas; see Elementary symmetric polynomial on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Relating to the basic, essential or fundamental part of something.
- (chemistry, of a reaction) Involving only a single reaction step and transition state.
- (number theory, of an argument or proof, mostly historical outside the phrase "Elementary number theory") Making no use of complex analysis.
- (physics) Relating to a subatomic particle.
- Very simple.
- of or pertaining to or characteristic of elementary school or elementary education
- of or being the essential or basic part
- easy and not involved or complicated
noun
noun
- a school for young children; usually the first 6 or 8 grades
- (Philippines) A primary education school for grades 1-6 (a continuation of preschool). It is succeeded by junior high school.
- (Canada, US, historically UK) A children’s school, typically older than toddlers and younger than adolescents. In the U.S., elementary schools cover grades 1 through 5, and the ages of the children are usually 6-11 years. At a minimum, elementary schools will teach basic reading, writing, arithmetic, and history.
noun
- a school for young children; usually the first 6 or 8 grades
- (US, rare, regional) Elementary school.
- a secondary school emphasizing Latin and Greek in preparation for college
- (chiefly UK) A secondary school that stresses academic over practical or vocational education, until recent times open to those pupils who had passed the 11-plus examination.
noun
adj
verb
noun
- a private secondary school
- (British) A private primary school which prepares its pupils for the common entrance examination most commonly at the age of thirteen, and subsequent entry into public school.
- (US) A private or public school intended to prepare its students to gain admission into prestigious universities.
noun
- a secondary school (usually private)
- an institution for the advancement of art or science or literature
- a school for special training
- a learned establishment for the advancement of knowledge
- (UK, education) A school directly funded by central government, independent of local control; a charter school.
- A society of learned people united for the advancement of the arts and sciences, and literature, or some particular art or science.
- (classical studies, usually capitalized) The garden where Plato taught.
- (with the, without reference to any specific academy) Academia.
- A school or place of training in which some special art is taught.
- (classical studies, usually capitalized) Plato's philosophical system based on skepticism; Plato's followers.
- A body of established opinion in a particular field, regarded as authoritative.
- An institution for the study of higher learning; a college or a university; typically a private school.
noun
- a secondary school usually including 7th and 8th grades
- (US) A school for children who have completed elementary school or grade school, but are not yet old enough for high school. It often includes grades 7 and 8, and possibly also 6 or 9.
- (Philippines) A secondary education school for grades 7–10 (a continuation of elementary school). It is succeeded by senior high school.
noun
- (education) A secondary school.
- (electronics) An inductive coil or loop that is magnetically powered by a primary in a transformer or similar.
- (astronomy) A secondary circle.
- (aviation) A radar return generated by the response of an aircraft's transponder to an interrogation signal broadcast by a radar installation, containing additional encoded identification and situational data not available from a simple primary return.
- Anything secondary or of lesser importance.
- One who occupies a subordinate or auxiliary place; a delegate deputy.
- Ellipsis of secondary colour.
- (astronomy) A satellite.
- (ornithology) Any flight feather attached to the ulna (forearm) of a bird.
- (military) The second stage of a multistage thermonuclear weapon, which generates a fusion explosion when imploded as an indirect result of the fission explosion of the primary, and which, in a few extremely large weapons, itself implodes a fusion tertiary.
- (finance) An act of issuing more stock by an already publicly traded corporation.
- (American football, Canadian football) The defensive backs.
- coil such that current is induced in it by passing a current through the primary coil
- the defensive football players who line up behind the linemen
adj
- (manufacturing) Relating to the manufacture of goods from raw materials.
- (of a color) Formed by mixing primary colors.
- (education) Related to secondary education, i.e. schooling between the ages of (approximately) 11 and 18.
- Of less than primary importance.
- (anatomy) Pertaining to the second joint of the wing of a bird.
- Originating from a deputy or delegated person or body.
- (organic chemistry) Derived from a parent compound by replacement of two atoms of hydrogen by organic radicals.
- (taxonomy, not comparable) Representing a reversion to an ancestral state.
- (geology) Produced by alteration or deposition subsequent to the formation of the original rock mass.
- (geology) Developed by pressure or other causes.
- (medicine) Dependent or consequent upon another disease, or occurring in the second stage of a disease.
- Next in order to the first or primary; of second place in origin, rank, etc.
- inferior in rank or status
- not of major importance
- belonging to a lower class or rank
- depending on or incidental to what is original or primary
- being of second rank or importance or value; not direct or immediate
noun
- a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
- a lofty level or position or degree
- a forward gear with a gear ratio that gives the greatest vehicle velocity for a given engine speed
- an air mass of higher than normal pressure
- a high place
- a state of sustained elation
- a state of altered consciousness induced by alcohol or narcotics
- (countable) A high point or position, literally (as, an elevated place; a superior region; a height; the sky; heaven) or figuratively (as, a point of success or achievement; a time when things are at their best, greatest, most numerous, maximum, etc).
- (countable, card games) The highest card dealt or drawn.
- (countable, meteorology, informal) A large area of elevated atmospheric pressure; an anticyclone.
- (countable and uncountable, informal) Ellipsis of high school.
- (countable) A period of euphoria, from excitement or from an intake of drugs.
- The maximum atmospheric temperature recorded at a particular location, especially during one 24-hour period.
- (countable) A drug that gives such a high.
adj
- slightly and pleasantly intoxicated from alcohol or a drug (especially marijuana)
- happy and excited and energetic
- greater than normal in quantity or amount
- (literal meaning) being at or having a relatively great or specific elevation or upward extension (sometimes used in combinations like ‘knee-high’)
- standing above others in quality or position
- (used of the smell of meat) smelling spoiled or tainted
- used of sounds and voices; high in pitch or frequency
- (sports such as soccer) Positioned up the field, towards the opposing team's goal.
- (poker) Having the highest rank in a straight, flush or straight flush.
- (acoustics) Acute or shrill in pitch, due to being of greater frequency, i.e. produced by more rapid vibrations (wave oscillations).
- Elevated in mood; marked by great merriment, excitement, etc.
- (of meat, especially venison) Strong-scented; slightly tainted/spoiled; beginning to decompose.
- (of a body of water) With tall waves.
- Remote (to the north or south) from the equator; situated at (or constituting) a latitude which is expressed by a large number.
- (of an opinion or practice, obsolete outside set phrases) Extreme, excessive; now specifically very traditionalist and conservative.
- Large, great (in amount or quantity, value, force, energy, etc).
- Very elevated; extending or being far above a base; tall; lofty.
- Having a large or comparatively larger concentration of (a substance, which is often but not always linked by "in" when predicative).
- Consummate; advanced (e.g. in development) to the utmost extent or culmination, or possessing a quality in its supreme degree, at its zenith.
- (of a card or hand) Winning; able to take a trick, win a round, etc.
- (phonetics) Made with some part of the tongue positioned high in the mouth, relatively close to the palate.
- (of a lifestyle) Luxurious; rich.
- (with on or about) Keen, enthused.
- Having a specified elevation or height; tall.
- (baseball, of a ball) Above the batter's shoulders.
- Of great importance and consequence: grave (if negative) or solemn (if positive).
- (informal) Intoxicated; under the influence of a mood-altering drug, formerly usually alcohol, but now (from the mid-20th century) usually not alcohol but rather marijuana, cocaine, heroin, etc.
- Advanced in complexity (and hence potentially abstract and/or difficult to comprehend).
- Pertaining to (or, especially of a language: spoken in) in an area which is at a greater elevation, for example more mountainous, than other regions.
- Lofty, often to the point of arrogant, haughty, boastful, proud.
- Elevated in status, esteem, or prestige, or in importance or development; exalted in rank, station, or character.
- Relatively elevated; rising or raised above the average or normal level from which elevation is measured.
- Most exalted; foremost.
- (nautical, of a sailing ship) Near, in its direction of travel, to the (direction of the) wind.
adv
noun
- a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
- (Philippines, historical) A secondary education school for years 1-4 (now junior high school)
- (Philippines) A secondary education school, consisting of junior high school and senior high school (grades 7-12)
- (Canada, US, Australia, Scotland) A secondary school.
- (education) An institution which provides all or part of secondary education.
noun
- a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
- (Philippines) A secondary education school for grades 11 and 12 (a continuation of junior high school), which consists of tracks, which some consist of strands.
- (US) An institution which provides secondary education, typically in grades 10, 11, and 12, and often also in grade 9.
noun
- British school for children aged 7-11
- (UK) A school providing education to children in Key Stage 2, i.e. for four academic years from September after a child's 7th birthday.
- (Canada, chiefly Ontario) A school teaching children from kindergarten to Grade 5; an elementary school.
- (Australia) Usually a part of a private school that educates children between the ages of 2 and 5.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- athletic facility equipped for sports or physical training
- (formal) A large room or building for indoor sports.
- A type of secondary school in some European countries which typically prepares students for university.
- (historical) A public place or building where Ancient Greek youths took exercise, with running and wrestling grounds, baths, and halls for conversation.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- a public hall for lectures and concerts
- (US, historical) A school, especially European, at a stage between elementary school and college, a lycée.
- An association for literary improvement.
- (historical) A public hall designed for lectures, readings, or concerts.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- (education, countable) A school which crosses the traditional divide between primary school and secondary school.
- (education, uncountable) An educational level or stage between primary school and secondary school.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- (UK, Ireland, Hong Kong) A state school attended between the ages of 11 and 16 or 18 between primary school and university.
- (Canada, US) The federally designated, graduation-separated classification of grades 9–12 (approximately ages 14–18), regardless of whether they are compiled together in one school or separate from the other grades.
- (Singapore) Middle school; junior high school; a school that one attends between the ages of 12-17 (equivalent of grades 7-10 in North America, and years 7-10 in Australia).
noun
- a preschool for children age 4 to 6 to prepare them for primary school
- (Philippines) The two levels between nursery and prep; the second and third years of preschool.
- (Canada, US, Australia, India) The elementary school grade before first grade.
- (Canada, US, Australia, India) An educational institution for young children, usually between ages 4 and 6; nursery school.
noun
- (informal, countable) A prep school.
- (countable) Preparation.
- Abbreviation of preposition.
- (Australia) Nursery school; preschool.
- (informal, countable) A student or graduate of a prep school, a preppy.
- Alternative form of PrEP.
- (UK, chiefly private schools, uncountable) Homework; work set to do outside class time.
- (Philippines) Preparatory level; the last two levels or the fourth and fifth years of preschool; the two levels before first grade.
- (horse racing) A preparatory race or workout.
- (US, slang, chiefly derogatory) A person using the styles and mannerisms (especially in terms of fashion) associated with prep students.
- preparatory school work done outside school (especially at home)
verb
prep_phrase
noun
- (Australia) A private (non-government) primary or high school.
- (now chiefly in some proper nouns) A group of people sharing common purposes or goals, especially ecclesiastics or professionals; a corporate group; a group of colleagues.
- (chiefly UK) A non-specialized, semi-autonomous division of a university, with its own faculty, departments, library, etc.
- (politics) An electoral college.
- A specialized division of a university.
- (Ireland, Philippines) A university.
- (UK) An institution for adult education at a basic or intermediate level (teaching those of any age).
- (chiefly US) An institution of higher education teaching undergraduates.
- (Singapore) A government high school, short for junior college.
- (UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa) A high school or secondary school.
- (Canada) A postsecondary institution that offers vocational training and/or associate's degrees.
- (UK) An institution of further education at an intermediate level; sixth form.
- (in Chile) A bilingual school.
- (Australia) A residential hall associated with a university, possibly having its own tutors.
- an institution of higher education created to educate and grant degrees; often a part of a university
- a complex of buildings in which an institution of higher education is housed
- the body of faculty and students of a college
noun
- Initialism of middle school.
- (numismatics) Initialism of mint state, a grading term.
- (broadcasting) Initialism of medium shot.
- (cardiology) Initialism of mitral stenosis.
- (pharmacology) Initialism of morphine sulfate.
- (UK politics) Initialism of member of Senedd
- (nautical) M/S: Initialism of motor ship.
- (criminology) Initialism of murder-suicide.
- (plural MSS) Abbreviation of manuscript.
- (neurology, uncountable) Initialism of multiple sclerosis.
- (philately) Initialism of mini-sheet.
- (academics) Initialism of Master of Science.
- a chronic progressive nervous disorder involving loss of myelin sheath around certain nerve fibers
- a master's degree in science
name
noun
- A private residential school for girls.
- (by extension) The place or original stock from which anything is brought or produced.
- A piece of ground where seed is sown for producing plants for transplantation.
- A Roman Catholic priest educated in a foreign seminary; a seminarist.
- A theological school for the training of rabbis, priests, or ministers.
- (Mormonism) A class of religious education for youths ages 14–18 that accompanies normal secular education.
- a private place of education for the young
- a theological school for training ministers or priests or rabbis
adj
noun
- Initialism of school district.
- (video games) Initialism of self-destruct.
- (genetics) Initialism of segmental duplication.
- (law enforcement) Initialism of sheriff's department.
- (mathematics) Initialism of standard deviation.
- (relationships) Initialism of sugar daddy
- (television) Initialism of standard definition (“typically 640×480 pixels”).
name
noun
- A primary school.
- The first year of grade school.
- (aviation) A radar return from an aircraft (or other object) produced solely by the reflection of the radar beam from the aircraft's skin, without additional information from the aircraft's transponder.
- The most massive component of a gravitationally bound system, such as a planet in relation to its satellites.
- (military) The first stage of a thermonuclear weapon, which sets off a fission explosion to help trigger a fusion reaction in the weapon's secondary stage.
- A primary colour.
- (ornithology) Any flight feather attached to the manus (hand) of a bird.
- (electronics) A directly driven inductive coil, as in a transformer or induction motor that is magnetically coupled to a secondary.
- A base or fundamental component; something that is irreducible.
- (medicine) The primary site of a disease; the original location or source of the disease.
- (political science) A primary election; a preliminary election to select a political candidate of a political party, or the first round of a two-round election.
- one of the main flight feathers projecting along the outer edge of a bird's wing
- coil forming the part of an electrical circuit such that changing current in it induces a current in a neighboring circuit
- a preliminary election where delegates or nominees are chosen
- (astronomy) a celestial body (especially a star) relative to other objects in orbit around it
adj
- (medicine) Relating to day-to-day care provided by health professionals such as nurses, general practitioners, dentists etc.
- (medicine) Relating to the place where a disorder or disease started to occur.
- (chemistry) Illustrating, possessing, or characterized by, some quality or property in the first degree; having undergone the first stage of substitution or replacement.
- (geology) Earliest formed; fundamental.
- First or earliest in a group or series.
- Main; principal; chief; placed ahead of others.
- not derived from or reducible to something else; basic
- of first rank or importance or value; direct and immediate rather than secondary
- most important element
- of or being the essential or basic part
verb
- (US, politics, transitive, intransitive) To challenge (an incumbent sitting politician) for their political party's nomination to run for re-election, through running a challenger campaign in a primary election, especially one that is more ideologically extreme.
- (US, intransitive, transitive) To take part in a primary election.
noun
noun
- a school for young children; usually the first 6 or 8 grades
- (Philippines) A primary education school for grades 1-6 (a continuation of preschool). It is succeeded by junior high school.
- (Canada, US, historically UK) A children’s school, typically older than toddlers and younger than adolescents. In the U.S., elementary schools cover grades 1 through 5, and the ages of the children are usually 6-11 years. At a minimum, elementary schools will teach basic reading, writing, arithmetic, and history.
noun
- a school for young children; usually the first 6 or 8 grades
- (US, rare, regional) Elementary school.
- a secondary school emphasizing Latin and Greek in preparation for college
- (chiefly UK) A secondary school that stresses academic over practical or vocational education, until recent times open to those pupils who had passed the 11-plus examination.
noun
adj
verb
noun
- a private secondary school
- (British) A private primary school which prepares its pupils for the common entrance examination most commonly at the age of thirteen, and subsequent entry into public school.
- (US) A private or public school intended to prepare its students to gain admission into prestigious universities.
noun
- a secondary school (usually private)
- an institution for the advancement of art or science or literature
- a school for special training
- a learned establishment for the advancement of knowledge
- (UK, education) A school directly funded by central government, independent of local control; a charter school.
- A society of learned people united for the advancement of the arts and sciences, and literature, or some particular art or science.
- (classical studies, usually capitalized) The garden where Plato taught.
- (with the, without reference to any specific academy) Academia.
- A school or place of training in which some special art is taught.
- (classical studies, usually capitalized) Plato's philosophical system based on skepticism; Plato's followers.
- A body of established opinion in a particular field, regarded as authoritative.
- An institution for the study of higher learning; a college or a university; typically a private school.
noun
- a secondary school usually including 7th and 8th grades
- (US) A school for children who have completed elementary school or grade school, but are not yet old enough for high school. It often includes grades 7 and 8, and possibly also 6 or 9.
- (Philippines) A secondary education school for grades 7–10 (a continuation of elementary school). It is succeeded by senior high school.
noun
- (education) A secondary school.
- (electronics) An inductive coil or loop that is magnetically powered by a primary in a transformer or similar.
- (astronomy) A secondary circle.
- (aviation) A radar return generated by the response of an aircraft's transponder to an interrogation signal broadcast by a radar installation, containing additional encoded identification and situational data not available from a simple primary return.
- Anything secondary or of lesser importance.
- One who occupies a subordinate or auxiliary place; a delegate deputy.
- Ellipsis of secondary colour.
- (astronomy) A satellite.
- (ornithology) Any flight feather attached to the ulna (forearm) of a bird.
- (military) The second stage of a multistage thermonuclear weapon, which generates a fusion explosion when imploded as an indirect result of the fission explosion of the primary, and which, in a few extremely large weapons, itself implodes a fusion tertiary.
- (finance) An act of issuing more stock by an already publicly traded corporation.
- (American football, Canadian football) The defensive backs.
- coil such that current is induced in it by passing a current through the primary coil
- the defensive football players who line up behind the linemen
adj
- (manufacturing) Relating to the manufacture of goods from raw materials.
- (of a color) Formed by mixing primary colors.
- (education) Related to secondary education, i.e. schooling between the ages of (approximately) 11 and 18.
- Of less than primary importance.
- (anatomy) Pertaining to the second joint of the wing of a bird.
- Originating from a deputy or delegated person or body.
- (organic chemistry) Derived from a parent compound by replacement of two atoms of hydrogen by organic radicals.
- (taxonomy, not comparable) Representing a reversion to an ancestral state.
- (geology) Produced by alteration or deposition subsequent to the formation of the original rock mass.
- (geology) Developed by pressure or other causes.
- (medicine) Dependent or consequent upon another disease, or occurring in the second stage of a disease.
- Next in order to the first or primary; of second place in origin, rank, etc.
- inferior in rank or status
- not of major importance
- belonging to a lower class or rank
- depending on or incidental to what is original or primary
- being of second rank or importance or value; not direct or immediate
noun
- a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
- a lofty level or position or degree
- a forward gear with a gear ratio that gives the greatest vehicle velocity for a given engine speed
- an air mass of higher than normal pressure
- a high place
- a state of sustained elation
- a state of altered consciousness induced by alcohol or narcotics
- (countable) A high point or position, literally (as, an elevated place; a superior region; a height; the sky; heaven) or figuratively (as, a point of success or achievement; a time when things are at their best, greatest, most numerous, maximum, etc).
- (countable, card games) The highest card dealt or drawn.
- (countable, meteorology, informal) A large area of elevated atmospheric pressure; an anticyclone.
- (countable and uncountable, informal) Ellipsis of high school.
- (countable) A period of euphoria, from excitement or from an intake of drugs.
- The maximum atmospheric temperature recorded at a particular location, especially during one 24-hour period.
- (countable) A drug that gives such a high.
adj
- slightly and pleasantly intoxicated from alcohol or a drug (especially marijuana)
- happy and excited and energetic
- greater than normal in quantity or amount
- (literal meaning) being at or having a relatively great or specific elevation or upward extension (sometimes used in combinations like ‘knee-high’)
- standing above others in quality or position
- (used of the smell of meat) smelling spoiled or tainted
- used of sounds and voices; high in pitch or frequency
- (sports such as soccer) Positioned up the field, towards the opposing team's goal.
- (poker) Having the highest rank in a straight, flush or straight flush.
- (acoustics) Acute or shrill in pitch, due to being of greater frequency, i.e. produced by more rapid vibrations (wave oscillations).
- Elevated in mood; marked by great merriment, excitement, etc.
- (of meat, especially venison) Strong-scented; slightly tainted/spoiled; beginning to decompose.
- (of a body of water) With tall waves.
- Remote (to the north or south) from the equator; situated at (or constituting) a latitude which is expressed by a large number.
- (of an opinion or practice, obsolete outside set phrases) Extreme, excessive; now specifically very traditionalist and conservative.
- Large, great (in amount or quantity, value, force, energy, etc).
- Very elevated; extending or being far above a base; tall; lofty.
- Having a large or comparatively larger concentration of (a substance, which is often but not always linked by "in" when predicative).
- Consummate; advanced (e.g. in development) to the utmost extent or culmination, or possessing a quality in its supreme degree, at its zenith.
- (of a card or hand) Winning; able to take a trick, win a round, etc.
- (phonetics) Made with some part of the tongue positioned high in the mouth, relatively close to the palate.
- (of a lifestyle) Luxurious; rich.
- (with on or about) Keen, enthused.
- Having a specified elevation or height; tall.
- (baseball, of a ball) Above the batter's shoulders.
- Of great importance and consequence: grave (if negative) or solemn (if positive).
- (informal) Intoxicated; under the influence of a mood-altering drug, formerly usually alcohol, but now (from the mid-20th century) usually not alcohol but rather marijuana, cocaine, heroin, etc.
- Advanced in complexity (and hence potentially abstract and/or difficult to comprehend).
- Pertaining to (or, especially of a language: spoken in) in an area which is at a greater elevation, for example more mountainous, than other regions.
- Lofty, often to the point of arrogant, haughty, boastful, proud.
- Elevated in status, esteem, or prestige, or in importance or development; exalted in rank, station, or character.
- Relatively elevated; rising or raised above the average or normal level from which elevation is measured.
- Most exalted; foremost.
- (nautical, of a sailing ship) Near, in its direction of travel, to the (direction of the) wind.
adv
noun
- a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
- (Philippines, historical) A secondary education school for years 1-4 (now junior high school)
- (Philippines) A secondary education school, consisting of junior high school and senior high school (grades 7-12)
- (Canada, US, Australia, Scotland) A secondary school.
- (education) An institution which provides all or part of secondary education.
noun
- a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
- (Philippines) A secondary education school for grades 11 and 12 (a continuation of junior high school), which consists of tracks, which some consist of strands.
- (US) An institution which provides secondary education, typically in grades 10, 11, and 12, and often also in grade 9.
noun
- British school for children aged 7-11
- (UK) A school providing education to children in Key Stage 2, i.e. for four academic years from September after a child's 7th birthday.
- (Canada, chiefly Ontario) A school teaching children from kindergarten to Grade 5; an elementary school.
- (Australia) Usually a part of a private school that educates children between the ages of 2 and 5.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- athletic facility equipped for sports or physical training
- (formal) A large room or building for indoor sports.
- A type of secondary school in some European countries which typically prepares students for university.
- (historical) A public place or building where Ancient Greek youths took exercise, with running and wrestling grounds, baths, and halls for conversation.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- a public hall for lectures and concerts
- (US, historical) A school, especially European, at a stage between elementary school and college, a lycée.
- An association for literary improvement.
- (historical) A public hall designed for lectures, readings, or concerts.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- (education, countable) A school which crosses the traditional divide between primary school and secondary school.
- (education, uncountable) An educational level or stage between primary school and secondary school.
noun
- a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
- (UK, Ireland, Hong Kong) A state school attended between the ages of 11 and 16 or 18 between primary school and university.
- (Canada, US) The federally designated, graduation-separated classification of grades 9–12 (approximately ages 14–18), regardless of whether they are compiled together in one school or separate from the other grades.
- (Singapore) Middle school; junior high school; a school that one attends between the ages of 12-17 (equivalent of grades 7-10 in North America, and years 7-10 in Australia).
noun
- a preschool for children age 4 to 6 to prepare them for primary school
- (Philippines) The two levels between nursery and prep; the second and third years of preschool.
- (Canada, US, Australia, India) The elementary school grade before first grade.
- (Canada, US, Australia, India) An educational institution for young children, usually between ages 4 and 6; nursery school.
noun
- (informal, countable) A prep school.
- (countable) Preparation.
- Abbreviation of preposition.
- (Australia) Nursery school; preschool.
- (informal, countable) A student or graduate of a prep school, a preppy.
- Alternative form of PrEP.
- (UK, chiefly private schools, uncountable) Homework; work set to do outside class time.
- (Philippines) Preparatory level; the last two levels or the fourth and fifth years of preschool; the two levels before first grade.
- (horse racing) A preparatory race or workout.
- (US, slang, chiefly derogatory) A person using the styles and mannerisms (especially in terms of fashion) associated with prep students.
- preparatory school work done outside school (especially at home)
verb
noun
- (Australia) A private (non-government) primary or high school.
- (now chiefly in some proper nouns) A group of people sharing common purposes or goals, especially ecclesiastics or professionals; a corporate group; a group of colleagues.
- (chiefly UK) A non-specialized, semi-autonomous division of a university, with its own faculty, departments, library, etc.
- (politics) An electoral college.
- A specialized division of a university.
- (Ireland, Philippines) A university.
- (UK) An institution for adult education at a basic or intermediate level (teaching those of any age).
- (chiefly US) An institution of higher education teaching undergraduates.
- (Singapore) A government high school, short for junior college.
- (UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa) A high school or secondary school.
- (Canada) A postsecondary institution that offers vocational training and/or associate's degrees.
- (UK) An institution of further education at an intermediate level; sixth form.
- (in Chile) A bilingual school.
- (Australia) A residential hall associated with a university, possibly having its own tutors.
- an institution of higher education created to educate and grant degrees; often a part of a university
- a complex of buildings in which an institution of higher education is housed
- the body of faculty and students of a college
noun
- Initialism of middle school.
- (numismatics) Initialism of mint state, a grading term.
- (broadcasting) Initialism of medium shot.
- (cardiology) Initialism of mitral stenosis.
- (pharmacology) Initialism of morphine sulfate.
- (UK politics) Initialism of member of Senedd
- (nautical) M/S: Initialism of motor ship.
- (criminology) Initialism of murder-suicide.
- (plural MSS) Abbreviation of manuscript.
- (neurology, uncountable) Initialism of multiple sclerosis.
- (philately) Initialism of mini-sheet.
- (academics) Initialism of Master of Science.
- a chronic progressive nervous disorder involving loss of myelin sheath around certain nerve fibers
- a master's degree in science
name
noun
- A private residential school for girls.
- (by extension) The place or original stock from which anything is brought or produced.
- A piece of ground where seed is sown for producing plants for transplantation.
- A Roman Catholic priest educated in a foreign seminary; a seminarist.
- A theological school for the training of rabbis, priests, or ministers.
- (Mormonism) A class of religious education for youths ages 14–18 that accompanies normal secular education.
- a private place of education for the young
- a theological school for training ministers or priests or rabbis
adj
noun
- Initialism of school district.
- (video games) Initialism of self-destruct.
- (genetics) Initialism of segmental duplication.
- (law enforcement) Initialism of sheriff's department.
- (mathematics) Initialism of standard deviation.
- (relationships) Initialism of sugar daddy
- (television) Initialism of standard definition (“typically 640×480 pixels”).
name
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adj
- Relating to an elementary school.
- (sciences) Fundamental: serving as a building block for more complicated structures or processes.
- (mathematics, of a square matrix) Which performs a row or column operation on another matrix when the two are multiplied; see Elementary matrix on Wikipedia.Wikipedia (Such matrices are called "elementary" because they generate the general linear group).
- (mathematics, of an argument or proof) Straightforward, employing only basic techniques; not requiring substantial knowledge (of some particular domain, object, etc.).
- (mathematics, of a symmetric polynomial) Arising from Vieta's formulas; see Elementary symmetric polynomial on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Relating to the basic, essential or fundamental part of something.
- (chemistry, of a reaction) Involving only a single reaction step and transition state.
- (number theory, of an argument or proof, mostly historical outside the phrase "Elementary number theory") Making no use of complex analysis.
- (physics) Relating to a subatomic particle.
- Very simple.
- of or pertaining to or characteristic of elementary school or elementary education
- of or being the essential or basic part
- easy and not involved or complicated