has gloss | (noun) the way something is with respect to its main attributes; "the current state of knowledge"; "his state of health"; "in a weak financial state" state |
lexicalization | eng: state |
subclass of | (noun) an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of an entity attribute |
| Note: 31 other subclass(es) ommited in the following list |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being split or cleft; "there was a cleavage between the liberal and conservative members" cleavage |
has subclass | (noun) a state that is intermediate between extremes; a middle position; "a happy medium" medium |
has subclass | (noun) a mode of being or form of existence of a person or thing; "the human condition" condition |
has subclass | (noun) a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations" status, condition |
has subclass | (noun) the general state of things; the combination of circumstances at a given time; "the present international situation is dangerous"; "wondered how such a state of affairs had come about"; "eternal truths will be neither true nor eternal unless they have fresh meaning for every new social situation"- Franklin D.Roosevelt situation, state of affairs |
has subclass | (noun) a state of connectedness between people (especially an emotional connection); "he didn't want his wife to know of the relationship" relationship |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being an isomer; the complex of chemical and physical phenomena characteristic of isomers isomerism |
has subclass | (noun) a specific identifiable position in a continuum or series or especially in a process; "a remarkable degree of frankness"; "at what stage are the social sciences?" stage, degree, level, point |
has subclass | (noun) (of a government or government official) holding an office means being in power; "being in office already gives a candidate a great advantage"; "during his first year in office"; "during his first year in power"; "the power of the president" office, power |
has subclass | (noun) the state or fact of existing; "a point of view gradually coming into being"; "laws in existence for centuries" existence, beingness, being |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being employed or having a job; "they are looking for employment"; "he was in the employ of the city" employment, employ |
has subclass | (noun) established customary state (especially of society); "order ruled in the streets"; "law and order" order |
has subclass | (noun) a disturbance of the peace or of public order disorder |
has subclass | (noun) a state of deep-seated ill-will antagonism, hostility, enmity |
has subclass | (noun) a state of opposition between persons or ideas or interests; "his conflict of interest made him ineligible for the post"; "a conflict of loyalties" conflict |
has subclass | (noun) the degree of visibility of your environment illumination |
has subclass | (noun) a state of no motion or movement; "the utter motionlessness of a marble statue" motionlessness, lifelessness, stillness |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being active; "his sphere of activity"; "he is out of action" action, activeness, activity |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being inactive inaction, inactiveness, inactivity |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being imminent and liable to happen soon imminence, imminency, impendence, imminentness, forthcomingness, impendency |
has subclass | (noun) the state of having been made ready or prepared for use or action (especially military action); "putting them in readiness"; "their preparation was more than adequate" readiness, preparation, preparedness |
has subclass | (noun) the presence of excess potassium in the circulating blood kalemia |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being enlarged enlargement |
has subclass | (noun) the state of lacking unity separation |
has subclass | (noun) state of being mature; full development maturity, matureness |
has subclass | (noun) not having reached maturity immatureness, immaturity |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being condemned to eternal punishment in Hell damnation, eternal damnation |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being without a flaw or defect flawlessness, ne plus ultra, perfection |
has subclass | (noun) an undivided or unbroken completeness or totality with nothing wanting; "the integrity of the nervous system is required for normal development"; "he took measures to insure the territorial unity of Croatia" integrity, wholeness, unity |
has subclass | (noun) the state or fact of being an owner ownership |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being fit for market; ready to be bought or sold merchantability |
has subclass | (noun) (biology) the normal rigid state of fullness of a cell or blood vessel or capillary resulting from pressure of the contents against the wall or membrane turgor |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being homozygous; having two identical alleles of the same gene homozygosity |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being plural; "to mark plurality, one language may add an extra syllable to the word whereas another may simply change the vowel in the existing final syllable" plurality |
has subclass | (noun) (toxicology) the state of being capable of counteracting more than one toxin or antigen or kind of microorganism polyvalency, polyvalence |
has subclass | (noun) (chemistry) the state of having a valence greater than two multivalency, polyvalence, multivalence, polyvalency |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being a father; "tests were conducted to determine paternity" paternity |
has subclass | (noun) the state of having been made use of; "the rate of utilization" utilization |
has subclass | (noun) the experiencing of affective and emotional states; "she had a feeling of euphoria"; "he had terrible feelings of guilt"; "I disliked him and the feeling was mutual" feeling |
has subclass | (noun) the state of being cognitively skillful skillfulness |