Advertisement

Advertisement

View synonyms for status

status

[ stey-tuhs, stat-uhs ]

noun

  1. the position of an individual in relation to another or others, especially in regard to social or professional standing:

    Women in India have a lower status than men and therefore less control over money.

  2. high social or professional standing; prestige:

    The Wilsons have status in the community because of their charitable work.

  3. state or condition of affairs:

    Arbitration has failed to change the status of the disagreement.

  4. Law. the standing of a person before the law:

    Those students can receive the same tax breaks as citizens, regardless of their status as immigrants.

  5. Digital Technology. a short post on a social networking website or messaging application that gives information about the user’s present situation, activities, thoughts, etc.:

    I changed my Facebook status from married to single.



adjective

  1. conferring or believed to confer elevated status:

    a status car; a status job.

status

/ ˈsteɪtəs /

noun

  1. a social or professional position, condition, or standing to which varying degrees of responsibility, privilege, and esteem are attached
  2. the relative position or standing of a person or thing
  3. a high position or standing; prestige

    he has acquired a new status since he has been in that job

  4. the legal standing or condition of a person
  5. a state of affairs


status

  1. The relative position of an individual within a group, or of a group within a society.


Discover More

Notes

Though the term can refer to either high or low standing, it is often used only to imply a position of prestige.

Discover More

Other Words From

  • non·status adjective

Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of status1

First recorded in 1665–75; from Latin: “the condition of standing, stature, status,” equivalent to sta- (variant stem of stāre “to stand”) + -tus suffix of verbal action; stand

Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of status1

C17: from Latin: posture, from stāre to stand

Discover More

Synonym Study

See state.

Discover More

Example Sentences

You can see the status of your application from the Sqreen dashboard, receive notifications when there’s an incident and get information about incidents.

We are actively looking into this issue, and will update you with more information as we receive it via our status page on Twitter.

This affords companies an opportunity to examine the status quo and redesign their existing strategies to emerge as stronger leaders in the next normal.

From Quartz

In 2017, the Supreme Court ruled that states have the right to decide the status of sports betting for themselves.

Frustrated by the unpleasant banking experiences they and many millennials faced in the country, Bourgi and Bamba launched Djamo last year to challenge the banking industry status quo.

When the problem is already political, when the intolerable situation is the status quo?

Defenders of the status quo claim the old rules protect consumers.

But when she called back, Brinsley was determined to tall her about his minted screenwriter status.

Nothing,” Klein notes, “was more threatening to the education status quo in New York City than our charter school initiative.

In a country where talk is “cheap” and opinions are “a dime a dozen,” we give the facts special privileges and special status.

And his status is determined rather by his relation to the family than by his relation to the service.

The unusual political status of a city, completely independent of county jurisdiction, was originated at this time also.

In Roman times it received the dignity of a municipium—implying municipal status and Roman citizenship for its free inhabitants.

She had no civil status, but when she married Jules Desmarets her name, Clemence, and her age were publicly announced.

Gradus initialis hujus status est amicitia inordinata inter duos pueros aut duas puellas.

Advertisement

Discover More

What Is The Plural Of Status?

Plural word for status

The plural form of status is statuses (not stati). Even though status is derived from Latin, it isn’t pluralized by replacing the -us ending with -i, as is done in many other Latin-derived words ending in -us, such as cactus/cacti and fungus/fungi

Most words ending in -s, -ss, -ch, -sh, -x, and –o follow the conventional pluralization pattern of simply adding -es. However, several other words that end in -us are pluralized in the same way as status, including surplus/surpluses and census/censuses

Do you know: What is the plural of radius?

Word of the Day

tortuous

[tawr-choo-uhs ]

Meaning and examples

Start each day with the Word of the Day in your inbox!

By clicking "Sign Up", you are accepting Dictionary.com Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policies.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


staturedstatus asthmaticus