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The act of forming into a class or classes; a distribution into groups, as classes, orders, families, etc., according to some common relations or affinities.
The freight class to which an article is assigned for the purpose of applying transportation charges. Exhibit material is typically rated as class 125.
Condition in which the larger particles settle out below the finer ones. Also referred to as stratification. May also be referred to as the action to sort out particles by various size groups or to some other established criteria.
Evaluation of positions/jobs to determine job category/job series and grade/pay band based on a comparison of the whole job to one or more predetermined factors. Classification is one approach to job evaluation.
The on-going effort to assign every rose into a specific compartment according to its growth habits and/or genealogy so that we may succinctly describe groups of roses. Classification will always be the subject of debate as roses at the margin of one group might also fit inside the margin of an adjacent group. There are differing models of rose classification in use throughout the world.
student's status in respect to progress toward the completion of his/her curriculum, usually based upon the number of hours or courses to his/her credit, i.e., freshman, sophomore, etc.
The university's system of categorizing positions in descriptive titles and pay grades.
To compare property to similar properties with the same general characteristics for rating and underwriting purposes.
The process of assigning transactions to the appropriate accounts.
The process of formally grouping CIs by type, e.g. hardware, software, accommodation, people, documents, business processes, external services. The process of formally identifying Changes by type, e.g. project scope change request, corrective change request, innovative function change request, technical infrastructure change request. The process of formally identifying Incidents, Problems and Known Errors by origin, symptoms and cause. The classification data strings, which are likely to include information on business impact and urgency, are essentially part of the Incident Record for automated matching of new Incidents against the Problems/Known Errors database. A distinction is normally made between the initial, or opening, classification (the symptoms) and the final, or closing classification (the cause).
(1) The process of determining the sequence or order in which to arrange documents. See also ARRANGEMENT, FILE DESIGNATION.(2) See FILING SYSTEM.(3) The process or result of identifying records containing national security information. See also CLASSIFIED INFORMATION, DECLASSIFICATION.
(see taxonomy)
(1)Used to describe the classification of a sewage backflow: situation #1, situation #2 or situation #3. (2) Mold spore formation classifying: Level #1, Level #2, Level #3, Level #4 or Level #5 (3) Soot categorizing: light, medium, or heavy.
The bringing together into classes of element s that are similar such as the group ing of cost sample test type s of work, etc. [D02466] RMW
Assigning objects into groups within a system of categories. Classifying or grouping similar objects helps in retrieval when the objects are required.
a method that scientists use to identify animals, plants and insects. For example, a Galápagos tortoise is identified as follows: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Reptilia Order: Chelonia Family: Testudinae Genus: Geochelone Species: elephantopus
In general, the systematic grouping of things or events into classes.
A way of putting facts, things, people, etc. into groups based on something they have in common.
Process of assigning individual observations or features into groups, categories, or classes.
A system for assigning certain letters or numbers to books in order to group them in different subject areas. PUL uses two classification systems: LC - Library of Congress classification system developed at the largest library in the country, the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. Richardson - a classification system developed at the turn of the century by Ernest Richardson, a Princeton University Librarian.
a grouping of objects with the same data structure and behavior
the act or method of distributing people or things into a class or category according to characteristics; e.g., suspect classification.
putting things in groups where they can be easily found
the ability to group according to features.
The student's level. Students pursuing a degree/certificate are classified according to their progress within that program. Students not working on degrees are classified according to the highest level of credit they are seeking (graduate or undergraduate). Freshman - 0 - 24 earned hours Sophomore - 25 - 54 earned hours Junior - 55 - 84 earned hours Senior - 85 or more earned hours Undergraduate Non Degree Masters Doctoral Pre-Candidate - Primarily fulfilling formal course requirements Doctoral Candidate - Primarily engaged in independent study/research/work 1st yr professional - 1st year Law 2nd yr professional - 2nd year Law 3rd yr professional - 3rd year Law Graduate Non Degree
clas-if-ik-ay-shun Sorting things into groups
A systematic arrangement of objects (of any type) into groups or categories according to a set of established criteria.
A group of artifacts that belong to a general category can be given a classification. For example, objects in a Musical T&E classification includes objects such as pianos, piano benches, harps, sheet music, music stands and other similar objects.
the designation used for the student's year of study in terms of progress toward the student's chosen degree - freshman, sophomore, junior, senior.
Biological classification is the process of grouping living things on the basis of features they have in common, or on the basis of their ancestry, or of both. The word classification is also used for the resulting arrangement of living things into groups. Introduction to classification
A system of arranging the judging within different breeds.
1. The arrangement of things in logical order according to their degrees of likeness, especially the assignment of books to their proper places in a scheme of book classification. 2. A scheme for the arrangement of books and other materials in a logical sequence according to subject or form.
the act of distributing things into classes or categories of the same type
a group of people or things arranged by class or category
the basic cognitive process of arranging into classes or categories
a division or category in a classifying system
a grouping of related concepts as well as the separation of unrelated concepts such that the resulting groups are logical and in a useful sequence
a group of closely related concepts in hierarchy
a hierarchy of taxa (informative features that characterize an entity and distinguish it from other entities) and a set of generalizable features that apply to groups of taxa
an organization of everything in a domain by hierarchical groups, according to features generalizable to the members of the groups
a set of groups that determine how a layer is drawn on the map
a structure imposed on the space of automata which groups together cellular automata with related properties
a systematic grouping of the values that a variable can take comprising mutually exclusive classes, covering the full set of values, and often providing a hierarchical structure for aggregating data
a system of categories to which entities are assigned according to established criteria
An arrangement in groups or categories according to established criteria. Libraries usually use either the Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress classification system. The classification code is shown as the first part of the call number.
grouping objects based on shared properties or characteristics
The grouping, for underwriting, rating or other purposes, of policyholders or properties having the same general characteristics. Your insurance rate would be changed if you were reclassified.
Indication of a student’s progress toward degree completion based upon the number of hours completed. The categories of undergraduate classification are Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior
The process of organizing positions into categories of work (classes) based on the similarity of qualification, duties, authority, and responsibility.
a system of categorizing patent documents into groups of the same type of technology. Used to assist in searching patents.
Biological classification is a naming system for all organisms based primarily on structural criteria and arranges organisms in a hierarchy of groups that reflect evolutionary relationships. Generally the smallest group is the species but sub-species and varieties may also be identified. The classification system helps in the rapid identification of organisms and indicates their natural interrelationships.
Undergraduates are classified as freshmen, sophomore, junior or senior based on the number of credit hours earned, as follows: freshmen = 0 - 29 hours; sophomores = 30 - 59 hours; juniors = 60 - 89 hours; seniors = 90 or more.
based on how many credit hours a student has earned, not how many years the student has been in school: Freshman=0-29 hours; Sophomore=30-59; Junior=60-89; Senior=90 or more semester hours earned.
Arrangement or grouping.
The class you are in (freshman, sophomore, etc.). Classification is determined by the number of course credits earned. Students are classified as freshmen until they accumulate 7 course credits; sophomores until they accumulate 15; and juniors until they accumulate 24.
the systematic grouping of organisms into categories based upon shared characteristics or traits; organized into hierarchies with largest groups at the top and smaller subdivisions below; classes inherit traits from highest categories to lowest; a system for organizing, interpreting, and learning about organisms; based on many lines of evidence including morphology, anatomy, embryology, DNA patterns, etc.
Sorting things into groups with similar traits.
refers to the process of assigning cases that share some common identification but do not have social contact, interaction, or awareness of their shared aggregation to categories.
klas-i-fi-kayshun Any scheme for structuring data that is used to group individuals or sometimes attributes.
Classification is categorical, organizing special needs into the categories.
The grouping together of similarly related organisms.
System for organising material in the library to keep related subjects together on the shelves in an alphanumeric (letters and numbers) order. Normally he classification number is the same as the call number. The classification number allows library users to browse the shelves to find additional items close by on the same or related subjects.
Any system used to group living things according to shared features. The most commonly used classification system uses Latin scientific names to show evolutionary relationships between groups of living things.
A means of identifying the student by year of study and by course load. See “ Freshman,†“ Sophomore,†“ Junior,†“ Senior,†“ Graduate Student,†“ Full‑time Student,†“ Part‑time Student,†“ Auditor.
sorting or arranging into groups or categories based on specific characteristics
The systematic arrangement of objects into an information retrieval system based upon characteristics of the objects themselves. See also identification, nomenclature, systematics, and taxonomy.
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