group
any collection or assemblage of persons or things; cluster; aggregation: a group of protesters; a remarkable group of paintings.
a number of persons or things ranged or considered together as being related in some way.
Also called radical. Chemistry. two or more atoms specifically arranged, as the hydroxyl group, –OH.: Compare free radical.
Linguistics.
(in the classification of related languages within a family) a category of a lower order than a subbranch and of a higher order than a subgroup: the Low German group of West Germanic languages.
any grouping of languages, whether it is made on the basis of geography, genetic relationship, or something else.
Geology. a division of stratified rocks comprising two or more formations.
Military.
Army. a flexible administrative and tactical unit consisting of two or more battalions and a headquarters.
Air Force. an administrative and operational unit subordinate to a wing, usually composed of two or more squadrons.
Music. a section of an orchestra comprising the instruments of the same class.
Art. a number of figures or objects shown in an arrangement together.
Mathematics. an algebraic system that is closed under an associative operation, as multiplication or addition, and in which there is an identity element that, on operating on another element, leaves the second element unchanged, and in which each element has corresponding to it a unique element that, on operating on the first, results in the identity element.
Grammar (chiefly British). a phrase: nominal group; verbal group.
to place or associate together in a group, as with others.
to arrange in or form into a group or groups.
to form a group.
to be part of a group.
Origin of group
1Grammar notes for group
Other words for group
Other words from group
- groupwise, adverb
- su·per·group, noun
- un·grouped, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use group in a sentence
Groups like CAIR and leading intellectuals and imams have been denouncing acts like these for years.
The scheme has been condemned by civil liberties groups and queried by the National Association of Head Teachers.
Britain May Spy on Preschoolers Searching for Potential Jihadis | Nico Hines | January 7, 2015 | THE DAILY BEASTThis is where much of the action will be for anti-LGBT groups.
Those who have watched anti-gay groups closely suggest that there will be two major strategic shifts in their strategy.
At the same time, campaigns are spending less while the special-interest groups are spending more.
This, however, did not apply to the waters lying directly around the Poloe and Flatland groups.
The Giant of the North | R.M. BallantyneAt all events, let him if possible learn each of the three Groups by his own Analysis, looking at my work afterwards.
Assimilative Memory | Marcus Dwight Larrowe (AKA Prof. A. Loisette)She would not join the groups in their sports and bouts, but intoxicated with her newly conquered power, she swam out alone.
The Awakening and Selected Short Stories | Kate ChopinOn entering the salon, they found several groups already assembled.
The three groups necessarily include all in the community who circulate money.
Readings in Money and Banking | Chester Arthur Phillips
British Dictionary definitions for group
/ (ɡruːp) /
a number of persons or things considered as a collective unit
a number of persons bound together by common social standards, interests, etc
(as modifier): group behaviour
a small band of players or singers, esp of pop music
a number of animals or plants considered as a unit because of common characteristics, habits, etc
grammar another word, esp in systemic grammar, for phrase (def. 1)
an association of companies under a single ownership and control, consisting of a holding company, subsidiary companies, and sometimes associated companies
two or more figures or objects forming a design or unit in a design, in a painting or sculpture
a military formation comprising complementary arms and services, usually for a purpose: a brigade group
an air force organization of higher level than a squadron
Also called: radical chem two or more atoms that are bound together in a molecule and behave as a single unit: a methyl group -CH 3 Compare free radical
a vertical column of elements in the periodic table that all have similar electronic structures, properties, and valencies: Compare period (def. 8)
geology any stratigraphical unit, esp the unit for two or more formations
maths a set that has an associated operation that combines any two members of the set to give another member and that also contains an identity element and an inverse for each element
See blood group
to arrange or place (things, people, etc) in or into a group or (of things, etc) to form into a group
Origin of group
1Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Scientific definitions for group
[ grōōp ]
Two or more atoms that are bound together and act as a unit in a number of chemical compounds, such as a hydroxyl (OH) group.
In the Periodic Table, a vertical column that contains elements having the same number of electrons in the outermost shell of their atoms. Elements in the same group have similar chemical properties. See Periodic Table.
Mathematics A set with an operation whose domain is all ordered pairs of members of the set, such that the operation is binary (operates on two elements) and associative, the set contains the identity element of the operation, and each element of the set has an inverse element for the operation. The positive and negative integers and zero form a set that is a group under the operation of ordinary addition, since zero is the identity element of addition and the negative of each integer is its inverse. Groups are used extensively in quantum physics and chemistry to model phenomena involving symmetry and invariance.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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