1. Classe.
2. Famille.
3. Genre.
ETYM Latin categoria, Greek, to accuse, affirm, predicate; cata down, against + agora assembly.
A general concept that marks divisions or coordinations in a conceptual scheme.
In philosophy, a fundamental concept applied to being that cannot be reduced to anything more elementary. Aristotle listed ten categories: substance, quantity, quality, relation, place, time, position, state, action, and passion.
ETYM Cf. French classification.
In biology, the arrangement of organisms into a hierarchy of groups on the basis of their similarities in biochemical, anatomical, or physiological characters. The basic grouping is a species, several of which may constitute a genus, which in turn are grouped into families, and so on up through orders, classes, phyla (in plants, sometimes called divisions), to kingdoms.
1. A group of people or things arranged by class or category; SYN. categorization.
2. Restriction imposed by the government on documents or weapons that are available only to certain authorized people.
3. The basic cognitive process of arranging into classes or categories; SYN. categorization, sorting.
1. Contact established between applicants and prospective employees
2. The spatial property of the way in which something is placed:; SYN. arrangement.