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单词 grade
释义
grade1 noungrade2 verb
gradegrade1 /ɡreɪd/ ●●● S2 W3 AWL noun [countable] Entry menu
MENU FOR gradegrade1 standard2 rank3 mark in school4 make the grade5 school year6 slope
Word Origin
WORD ORIGINgrade1
Origin:
1500-1600 French, Latin gradus ‘step, degree’
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • Grade A beef
  • a low-grade fever
  • a steep grade
  • Class participation is a quarter of your final grade.
  • I need a really good grade on the final exam to pass the class.
  • I really liked my eighth grade math teacher.
  • I wasn't very happy with the grade on my essay.
  • If he gets good enough grades he'll get a scholarship to Michigan State.
  • She's in the fifth grade.
  • The pay scale is based on grade and length of service.
  • The second grade class is doing a play about the Pilgrims.
  • The seventh grade is taking a trip to Minneapolis next week.
  • weapons-grade nuclear material
  • What grade are you in?
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • A third group of mixed grade was recognised in 11 patients with low grade who also had occasional areas of high grade.
  • All grades are wholesome but U. S. Grade A is assigned to products which are of uniform size and free of blemishes.
  • But quality teas, the best grade, have hardly changed at around 200p a kilogramme.
  • Had he completely closed him-self off in the fourth grade?
  • My years at Sacred Heart, kindergarten through the middle of third grade, were a blur.
  • The yield of beef carcasses varies according to the yield grade from about 80 percent for Yield Grade No.
  • Trainees are paid on Clinical Scientist grade A, which is currently £9,239 p.a. increasing by annual increments.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatora letter or number that shows how well a student has done
a letter that is put on a student's work or on an exam to show how good or bad it is: · I wasn't very happy with the grade on my essay.· Class participation is a quarter of your final grade.good/bad grade: · I need a really good grade on the final exam to pass the class.get a grade: · If he gets good enough grades, he'll get a scholarship to Michigan State.
especially British the number or letter that is put on a student's work to show how good or bad it is: · His mark on the last test gave him a final average of 88%.get a mark: · "What mark did you get?" "B."good/high mark: · She came out with the second highest marks in the class.bad/low/poor mark: · You have to do the course again if you get low marks.get full marks (=get the highest possible marks): · I got full marks in the history test.
American a number which shows how well or badly a student has done in an examination, especially an important exam given to a lot of students: high/low score: · Students at King elementary generally have the highest test scores in the city.score on: · Scores on standardized tests have been steadily falling over the past ten years.
British all the marks that a student gets in a set of tests or examinations, that show whether he or she has been successful or not: · The school's "GCSE" results had been much better the previous year.get good results: · Ceri got better results than she expected.exam results: · David had appaling exam results at school despite his obvious intelligence.
American the average score that a student earns based on all their grades. Usually an A is 4 points, a B is 3 , a C is 2, and a D is 1, and an F is 0: · To be on the honor roll, students must have a GPA of at least 3.5.
to decide how well a student has done
British /grade American to look at students' work or examination papers and give them numbers or letters to show how good they are: · I have 48 English papers to grade this evening.· Mrs Parry, have you marked our tests yet?· The examiners who marked her A-level paper were very lenient and gave her a pass.mark/grade somebody/something on something: · The rough draft is graded on content, not on grammar.
a group of students in a school, college etc
a group of students or schoolchildren who are taught together: · There are twenty kids in the class.· She gets along well with the other children in her class.· I'm going out with some friends from my dance class.· I graduated in 1999. What class were you in?
a class or group of classes for children of a particular age in an American school: third/seventh/twelfth etc grade: · She's in the fifth grade.· I really liked my eighth grade math teacher.· The second grade class is doing a play about the Pilgrims.
a class or a group of classes for all the children of the same age in a British school for children between 11 and 18: · She's by far the brightest pupil in the form.third/fourth/fifth etc form: · I'm in the third form.· Mrs Davies took the fifth form to the science museum.
all the classes for children of a particular age in a British school or for students in a particular year of study at a British university: · He works a lot harder than most of the students in his year.third/fourth/fifth etc year: · There are 130 children in the second year.· I hated teaching the fifth year. They were always causing trouble.
a class for children with a particular level of ability in a British school: · She's in set one for maths and English and set two for history.· I was useless at school -- always in the bottom set in every subject.· We think you've improved sufficiently to go up to a higher set.
American someone who is in the first year at a high school or university: · We were only freshmen, so the older kids liked to pick on us.freshman class/year/course etc: · Chris remembers his freshman year at UCLA as if it were yesterday.
American someone who is in the second year at a high school or university: · This class is mainly for freshmen and sophomores.sophomore class/year etc: · George dropped out of college his sophomore year.
American someone who is in the third year at a high school or university: · a junior at NYUjunior class/year etc: · Donna spent spring semester of her junior year in Paris.
American someone who is in the fourth and final year at a high school or university: · I can't believe that Cari is a high school senior already.senior class/year etc: · The entire senior class took a trip to Disneyworld.
to reach a high enough standard
to succeed in reaching the necessary standard, especially in a difficult job: · She would like to become a lawyer but she's not sure whether she'll make the grade.· Only the talented few make the grade in professional golf.
use this when you are asking or considering whether someone will be good enough to do a particular job or to reach a particular standard: · We'll give you a week's trial in the job so we can see how you measure up.measure up to: · How will the new General Secretary measure up to his new task?
to achieve the level of quality that is necessary or expected: · The new design doesn't come up to our usual standards.· The computer system has certainly come up to expectations -- it's great!
to be as good as people expect - use this especially about people and their achievements, performances etc: · It was impossible to live up to my parents' expectations of me.· He's been under a lot of pressure to live up to his reputation as the world's best player.
to be good enough according to a standard that has been officially established: · Does the tap water meet government health standards?· The building does not meet the essential safety requirements.· Only one system succeeded in meeting the main performance specifications.
to be good enough at something, especially something difficult, to be able to do it successfully: · Do you have what it takes to run this business, or shall I give someone else the chance?· If you have what it takes and can stand the pace of advertising, you can earn a very good salary.
to say officially that someone or something has reached the necessary standard: · Each car has to be passed by a team of inspectors before it leaves the factory.· His blood pressure was rather high so the doctor couldn't pass him as fit for the job.
WORD SETS
appraisee, nounappraiser, nounassertiveness training, assessment centre, automatic checkoff, nounB2E, adjectivebasic wage, broadbanding, nounbusiness agent, callback, nouncasual, adjectivechampion of change, nounchange agent, nounCIO, cognitive dissonance, nouncollaborative working, nouncommand and control, nouncompany doctor, company officer, company union, comparable worth, nouncompassionate leave, nouncompetence profiling, nouncompetency-based, adjectivecompetency profiling, compliance officer, confidentiality clause, contract of employment, nouncontract of service, nouncontractual, adjectivecontribution, nouncontributory, adjectiveCOO, core competence, corporate communication, custom and practice, dead time, demarcation dispute, direct labour, disabled quota, dispute procedure, earnings-related, adjectiveemployee referral program, employee relations, employment, nounevergreen contract, expense account, nounfidelity insurance, field staff, fieldwork, nounfirst in, first out, nounflexitime, nounflyback interview, freelance, adjectivegagging clause, gardening leave, gender-awareness, noungolden handshake, noungolden parachute, noungrade, noungrade, verbgratuity, noungreen card, noungross misconduct, Hawthorne effect, Hay system, hirer, nounhiring hall, nounhotelling, nounHRM, hygiene factor, incentive fee, individual retirement account, job description, nounjob order, job quota, job-sharing, nounlast in, first out, nounleave, nounLIFO, marzipan layer, maternity leave, nounMBWA, medical certificate, nounmileage, nounminimum wage, nounmotivator factor, motor pool, nounnight shift, nounnoncontributory, adjectiveout-of-pocket expenses, nounout of work, adjectiveoutplacement, nounpart-time, adjectivepaternity leave, nounpensionable, adjectivepeon, nounperformance appraisal, probation, nounprobationer, nounprofit sharing, nounPRP, psychic income, psychometric testing, QWL, remuneration package, retirement plan, nounreturner, nounrota, nounrotate, verbsabbatical, nounsalary matrix, nounscreening interview, semi-skilled, adjectiveservice agreement, sick note, nounsickout, nounsick pay, nounspan of control, nounsplit shift, nounstrategic business unit, superannuation scheme, nounsweated labour, nounswing shift, nountacit knowledge, time card, nountime clock, nountime sheet, nountour of duty, nountrade dispute, training needs analysis, underpaid, adjectiveupskill, verbWorking Time Directive, nounwork permit, nounworkplace bargaining, work sampling, work study, nounwrongful termination,
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY Meaning 3adjectives
· If you study hard, you get good grades, and you get into good schools.
· If you get a bad grade, Mrs. Miller will help you until you can do better.
· She got high grades in all her science subjects.
· These boys receive low grades because they fail to turn in assignments.
· Ted got the top grade in his A-level maths exam.
grade + NOUN
British English:· Applicants must have Grade A, B, or C in two GCSE subjects.
verbs
· He had always gotten good grades.
British English:· Rick had achieved good exam grades.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(=do the same class at school again the following year)
(also mark a test British English)· I spent the day marking tests.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE
· Competition for entry to these programs is keen, and applicants need above-average grades to gain admission.
· The results are exquisite-moving from ballads and other composed pieces through different grades of abstraction to total collective improvisation.· He liked the different grades of sandpaper; he liked useful things.· For example, there may be different conditions for different grades of staff.· What are ranges in cost for different grades and different types of packaging? 8.· But there are different grades of interference.· I started out as a buck private and served in five different enlisted grades before becoming an officer.· The tonal range is extensive from just a few different grades.· This filter contains three sheets of different grade open-cell foam on the top, with Flocor filling the base.
· But quality teas, the best grade, have hardly changed at around 200p a kilogramme.· To get a better grade the student must take it from one of the students above by out-performing him or her.· She graduated with very good grades and went on to graduate school.· Kim's good grades in school plummeted.· I would go and get good grades.· Might the university expect better grades than they asked for previously?· They sing at good grades and sag at bad ones.
· The higher grades of employee were supplied, as was the custom with many firms, with shiny, new company cars.· Despite this tragedy, she graduated with the second highest grade point average in her high school.· In the high grade group, none of the variables or different modes of treatment influenced mortality.· Total copper production rose 5 percent because of higher ore grades at and increased output at Escondida.· Why did the right hon. Gentleman not decide to have a higher grade environmental impact assessment?· The carbon in pulp process uses higher grade ore which is crushed, milled and mixed with chemical solutions in large tanks.· This ratio was 0.78 in the high grade group.· Nor do they reward young people who take harder courses or earn higher grades.
· Many of these routes would get a lower E grade if Friends, nuts and chalk were used.· Can students sue teachers for giving them low grades?· Colds and fevers are of a low grade, not violent.· The better quality carcasses are fatter, more juicy, and more flavourful than carcasses of the lower grades.· All cases were regarded according to a classification of Isaacson etal into high grade and low grade B-cell mucosa associated lymphoid tissue.· The lower three grades are seldom sold as retail cuts but are used instead in making hamburger and meat food products.· On admission here, he had a low grade pyrexia, bilateral pleural effusions, and moderate smooth hepatomegaly.· Anna said they are the ones who score low grades and throw spitballs in class.
· From 1986 it was replaced by Standard grade.· Sandra Chalmers provides a workable set of stimulating games which cover the content area of Standard grade courses.
· A good three-quarters of Mr Singleton's production falls into the top two grades but he believes he can improve on that.· Both performances would rate in the top grade at schools level.· Gillingham marina offers top grade facilities without the South Coast price tag.· Sedgemore has improved so much since entering top grade rugby that club coach Alex Evans is tipping him for international honours.· Second, I had to pass all my examinations with top grades.· The proportion of women in the top three grades has almost doubled in the past four years.· They pride themselves on providing a top grade service and have done everything form cleaning ocean-going liners to baby-sitting chinchillas.
NOUN
· The figure could also be reduced by concentrating on those grade crossings where the benefit relative to cost is greatest.· The city and its suburbs have some 2, 000 public grade crossings, 268 with whistle bans.
· It can be argued that the finding of high grade dysplasia without cancer should be considered to be a success of surveillance.· Thus, follow up of patients with low grade dysplasia found one cancer in 223 patient years.· Four of the patients who had low grade dysplasia previously were negative for dysplasia at colectomy.· Two patients who had been negative for dysplasia were found to have low grade dysplasia in their colectomy specimens.· If high grade dysplasia was found, repeat biopsies were performed within six months.· Surgery was performed in cases of persistent high grade dysplasia, or carcinoma.
· The erosion of investment grade credits, though, would raise the stakes for banks.· Bancomext securities will receive an investment grade rating because of the structure.
· Despite this tragedy, she graduated with the second highest grade point average in her high school.
· Across the hall, a group of twenty grade school children are at work in two connected rooms.· In grade school Gary had served as an altar boy.· And they were the ones who taught the next generation from grade school up.· Many read at only grade school levels.· The local grade school and the high schools and the nearby universities exist.· Every one of these children who has started grade school has finished high school, Phyllis says.· In grade school, she wrote them herself and begged people to read her creations.· By 1990, District 4 boasted 21 junior high schools, plus six alternative grade schools.
VERB
· Nearly 90 % of candidates achieved A-E grades at A-level this year.· I've seen my daughter work continually over the past two years - and I mean work - to achieve her grades.
· I normally sell it straight off the combine for malting, or feed if it fails to make the grade.· After 1975, the grades were changed to A to E, with, in theory, no fail grades.· A two, a failing grade, would mean being kept back a year, to study with smaller children.· And what happened if you failed to make the grade?· The federal government has graded the San Francisco housing authority at only four points above a failing grade, said Brown.· But not only Cii-Honeywell Bull failed to make the grade.
· Many of these routes would get a lower E grade if Friends, nuts and chalk were used.· She says she got her grades, she's very shocked!· The test results were in and only his urine got a passing grade.· But for some, who didn't get the grades they hoped for, there's abject misery.· It was as useless as trying to get kidnapped in second grade.· To get a better grade the student must take it from one of the students above by out-performing him or her.· I would go and get good grades.
· Then the firm are given one year to make the grade.· Downtown News, so we know the pharmacists there make the journalistic grade.· It decided me that I wasn't going to be good enough to make the grade.· A handful of dramas make the grade but the sitcoms are failing miserably.· It became an aloof, lonely personal fight to make the grade.· Durham deliver PRE-SEASON thoughts on the prospects of newcomers Durham making the grade were borne out in the early weeks.· The best strategy is to have small males who stick like glue on the rare occasions when one makes the grade.· That was why she was making the grade as a jockey.
· The test results were in and only his urine got a passing grade.· We emerged from the first two big rapids with one passing grade and one failing.· Ciao Italia more than passed the grade on this one.
· Forty percent of all recruits who enter the armed forces every year read at eighth grade level or below.· Many read at only grade school levels.· The fifth one scarcely reads at sixth grade level.· Half the heads of households classified below the poverty line by federal standards can not read an eighth grade book.
· Most workers, for example, receive the craftsman's grade, which is 10 percent above the minimum.· While Jeb Bush received a 56 percent grade, President Bush earned a 52 percent approval rating from respondents.· Meanwhile, Footless Crow receives a strange grade of E5.· Many of their parents would say so, since they receive low grades.· Having tutored himself at home, Paul received an A grade for A-level computer studies when he was 16.· Bancomext securities will receive an investment grade rating because of the structure.· These boys receive low grades because they fail to turn in assignments.
· Which gave me time to attend to Sister Mary teaching the second grade and learn their lessons as well.· This is because Miss McFawn used to teach first grade where they did nothing but put on plays.· Allison, 24, is married and teaching fourth grade in Houston.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY
  • Only a few athletes make the grade in professional sports.
  • Only the talented few make the grade in professional golf.
  • She would like to become a lawyer but she's not sure whether she'll make the grade.
  • A handful of dramas make the grade but the sitcoms are failing miserably.
  • About 3. 1 million families made the grade this year.
  • Durham deliver PRE-SEASON thoughts on the prospects of newcomers Durham making the grade were borne out in the early weeks.
  • I normally sell it straight off the combine for malting, or feed if it fails to make the grade.
  • It became an aloof, lonely personal fight to make the grade.
  • It decided me that I wasn't going to be good enough to make the grade.
  • The best strategy is to have small males who stick like glue on the rare occasions when one makes the grade.
  • Then the firm are given one year to make the grade.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • It is a case of mission creep gone wildly over the top.
  • He was a good enough student to skip a grade in elementary school and later scored 1280 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test.
Word family
WORD FAMILYnoungradeadjectivegradedverbgrade
1standard a particular level of quality that a product, material etc has:  The best grades of tea are expensive. industrial grade diamondshigh/low grade low grade products2rank a particular level of job:  There are lots of jobs in junior grades.3mark in school a mark that a student is given for their work or for an examination:  He got a grade A in maths. Tim worked hard and got good grades.4make the grade to succeed or reach the necessary standard:  What does it take to make the grade as a top golfer?5school year one of the 12 years that students are at school in the American school system, or the students in a particular yearyearsecond/eleventh etc grade My brother is in sixth grade. a fifth-grade teacher6slope American English a slope or a degree of slope, especially in a road or railway SYN gradient British EnglishCOLLOCATIONS– Meaning 3adjectivesgood· If you study hard, you get good grades, and you get into good schools.bad· If you get a bad grade, Mrs. Miller will help you until you can do better.high· She got high grades in all her science subjects.low· These boys receive low grades because they fail to turn in assignments.the top grade· Ted got the top grade in his A-level maths exam.grade + NOUNgrade A/B/C etc. British English:· Applicants must have Grade A, B, or C in two GCSE subjects.verbsget a grade· He had always gotten good grades.achieve a grade British English:· Rick had achieved good exam grades.
grade1 noungrade2 verb
gradegrade2 ●●○ AWL verb [transitive] Verb Table
VERB TABLE
grade
Simple Form
PresentI, you, we, theygrade
he, she, itgrades
PastI, you, he, she, it, we, theygraded
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave graded
he, she, ithas graded
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad graded
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill grade
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have graded
Continuous Form
PresentIam grading
he, she, itis grading
you, we, theyare grading
PastI, he, she, itwas grading
you, we, theywere grading
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave been grading
he, she, ithas been grading
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad been grading
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill be grading
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have been grading
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • All the fruit is taken to the warehouse where it is graded and packed.
  • Beef is graded on the basis of its fat content.
  • I spent the weekend grading tests.
  • One supermarket now grades its wines on a scale of 1 to 9, from driest to sweetest.
  • The hillsides must be graded to prevent erosion.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Above this level, the contribution is graded, with contributions ceasing on incomes above £325 a week.
  • Although pork is not graded extensively, graded carcasses can be ordered.
  • Because various factors determine the thickness of egg white, eggs from different flocks are graded separately.
  • No matter who you are, you grade out just fine on the Schott curve.
  • Plutonium is graded by its isotopic composition.
  • The worms can be graded according to size, simply by shaking the harvested worms in some water in a small bottle.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatora letter or number that shows how well a student has done
a letter that is put on a student's work or on an exam to show how good or bad it is: · I wasn't very happy with the grade on my essay.· Class participation is a quarter of your final grade.good/bad grade: · I need a really good grade on the final exam to pass the class.get a grade: · If he gets good enough grades, he'll get a scholarship to Michigan State.
especially British the number or letter that is put on a student's work to show how good or bad it is: · His mark on the last test gave him a final average of 88%.get a mark: · "What mark did you get?" "B."good/high mark: · She came out with the second highest marks in the class.bad/low/poor mark: · You have to do the course again if you get low marks.get full marks (=get the highest possible marks): · I got full marks in the history test.
American a number which shows how well or badly a student has done in an examination, especially an important exam given to a lot of students: high/low score: · Students at King elementary generally have the highest test scores in the city.score on: · Scores on standardized tests have been steadily falling over the past ten years.
British all the marks that a student gets in a set of tests or examinations, that show whether he or she has been successful or not: · The school's "GCSE" results had been much better the previous year.get good results: · Ceri got better results than she expected.exam results: · David had appaling exam results at school despite his obvious intelligence.
American the average score that a student earns based on all their grades. Usually an A is 4 points, a B is 3 , a C is 2, and a D is 1, and an F is 0: · To be on the honor roll, students must have a GPA of at least 3.5.
to decide how well a student has done
British /grade American to look at students' work or examination papers and give them numbers or letters to show how good they are: · I have 48 English papers to grade this evening.· Mrs Parry, have you marked our tests yet?· The examiners who marked her A-level paper were very lenient and gave her a pass.mark/grade somebody/something on something: · The rough draft is graded on content, not on grammar.
to put things or people into groups
to arrange a large number of things by putting them into groups, so that you can deal with each group separately: · It takes a couple of hours to sort the mail in the morning.sort something into something: · We sorted all the clothes into two piles - those to be kept, and those to be given away. · The rubbish has to be sorted into things that can be recycled and things that can'tsort something according to something: · The eggs are sorted according to size.
also categorise British to decide which group something should belong to, when there is a clear system of separate groups: · Communication involves a variety of behaviours which are difficult to categorise.categorize something according to something: · The hotels are categorized according to the standard of the rooms and services they offer.categorize into: · Words can be categorised into verbs, nouns, adjectives etc. · Animals are categorised into three types - carnivores, herbivores and omnivores.categorize something as something (=say which group it is in): · The store categorizes records from Asia and Africa as 'World Music'.
to decide what group books, plants, animals etc belong to according to an official or scientific system: · Scientists have discovered a new type of butterfly which has not yet been classified.classify something as: · 43 countries are categorized as "low-income" by the World Bank.· Babies walking later than 18 months were classified as slow walkers.
if people or things are grouped , they have been put into separate groups according to a system: be grouped according to: · The vehicles are grouped according to engine size.be grouped together: · Non-fiction books are grouped together under different subjects.be grouped into: · Most European languages can be grouped into two main families.group something into types/categories/classes etc: · The respondents were grouped into three categories - non-smokers, smokers, and ex-smokers.
to say that people or things belong to a particular group, especially according to an official system: class somebody/something as something: · This prison houses the most dangerous criminals in Britain, those classed as "category A'.· Heroin and cocaine are classed as hard drugs.
to separate things such as food, drinks, or products into groups according to their quality: · All the fruit is taken to the warehouse where it is graded and packed.· One supermarket now grades its wines on a scale of 1 to 9, from driest to sweetest.
WORD SETS
appraisee, nounappraiser, nounassertiveness training, assessment centre, automatic checkoff, nounB2E, adjectivebasic wage, broadbanding, nounbusiness agent, callback, nouncasual, adjectivechampion of change, nounchange agent, nounCIO, cognitive dissonance, nouncollaborative working, nouncommand and control, nouncompany doctor, company officer, company union, comparable worth, nouncompassionate leave, nouncompetence profiling, nouncompetency-based, adjectivecompetency profiling, compliance officer, confidentiality clause, contract of employment, nouncontract of service, nouncontractual, adjectivecontribution, nouncontributory, adjectiveCOO, core competence, corporate communication, custom and practice, dead time, demarcation dispute, direct labour, disabled quota, dispute procedure, earnings-related, adjectiveemployee referral program, employee relations, employment, nounevergreen contract, expense account, nounfidelity insurance, field staff, fieldwork, nounfirst in, first out, nounflexitime, nounflyback interview, freelance, adjectivegagging clause, gardening leave, gender-awareness, noungolden handshake, noungolden parachute, noungrade, noungrade, verbgratuity, noungreen card, noungross misconduct, Hawthorne effect, Hay system, hirer, nounhiring hall, nounhotelling, nounHRM, hygiene factor, incentive fee, individual retirement account, job description, nounjob order, job quota, job-sharing, nounlast in, first out, nounleave, nounLIFO, marzipan layer, maternity leave, nounMBWA, medical certificate, nounmileage, nounminimum wage, nounmotivator factor, motor pool, nounnight shift, nounnoncontributory, adjectiveout-of-pocket expenses, nounout of work, adjectiveoutplacement, nounpart-time, adjectivepaternity leave, nounpensionable, adjectivepeon, nounperformance appraisal, probation, nounprobationer, nounprofit sharing, nounPRP, psychic income, psychometric testing, QWL, remuneration package, retirement plan, nounreturner, nounrota, nounrotate, verbsabbatical, nounsalary matrix, nounscreening interview, semi-skilled, adjectiveservice agreement, sick note, nounsickout, nounsick pay, nounspan of control, nounsplit shift, nounstrategic business unit, superannuation scheme, nounsweated labour, nounswing shift, nountacit knowledge, time card, nountime clock, nountime sheet, nountour of duty, nountrade dispute, training needs analysis, underpaid, adjectiveupskill, verbWorking Time Directive, nounwork permit, nounworkplace bargaining, work sampling, work study, nounwrongful termination,
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(=do the same class at school again the following year)
(also mark a test British English)· I spent the day marking tests.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN
· At first it feels like high school, then junior high, and finally grade school.· Lynette, Deborah, and Doreen, all in eighth grade in public school.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • It is a case of mission creep gone wildly over the top.
  • He was a good enough student to skip a grade in elementary school and later scored 1280 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test.
Word family
WORD FAMILYnoungradeadjectivegradedverbgrade
1to say what level of a quality something has, or what standard it isgrade something according to something Pencils are graded according to softness. All the parks are regularly checked and graded by tourist board inspectors.2especially American English to give a mark to an examination paper or to a piece of school work SYN  mark:  Ted is grading papers in his office.3to give a particular rank and level of pay to a job
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