What is another word for third class?

Pronunciation: [θˈɜːd klˈas] (IPA)

Third class is a term used to describe a lower-ranking or lower-quality category. Synonyms for third class include inferior, substandard, mediocre, second-rate, and low-grade. These words are often used to describe products, services, or experiences that fail to meet expectations or fall short in some way. Another term that is related to third class is "economy," which is used to describe a lower-cost option compared to premium or luxury offerings. While there may be a negative connotation to these terms, they can also be useful in identifying areas for improvement or opportunities for growth.

What are the hypernyms for Third class?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Third class

  • The first class contains four, which, we are informed, may be properly called beasts for hunting; namely, the hare, the hart, the wolf, and the wild boar. The second class contains the names of the beasts of the chase, and they are five; that is to say, the buck, the doe, the fox, the martin, and the roe. In the third class we find three, that are said to afford "greate dysporte" in the pursuit, and they are denominated, the grey or badger, the wild-cat and the otter…The reader may possibly be surprised, when he casts his eye over the foregoing list of animals for hunting, at seeing the names of several that do not exist at this time in England, and especially of the wolf, because he will readily recollect the story so commonly told of their destruction during the reign of Edgar.
    Joseph Strutt
  • I could give here several other ways of tracing and conceiving a series of curved lines, each curve more complex than any preceding one, but I think the best way to group together all such curves and them classify them in order, is by recognizing the fact that all points of those curves which we may call "geometric," that is, those which admit of precise and exact measurement, must bear a definite relation to all points of a straight line, and that this relation must be expressed by a single equation. If this equation contains no term of higher degree than the rectangle of two unknown quantities, or the square of one, the curve belongs to the first and simplest class, which contains only the circle, the parabola, the hyperbola, and the ellipse; but when the equation contains one or more terms of the third or fourth degree in one or both of the two unknown quantities (for it requires two unknown quantities to express the relation between two points) the curve belongs to the second class; and if the equation contains a term of the fifth or sixth degree in either or both of the unknown quantities the curve belongs to the third class, and so on indefinitely.
    René Descartes
  • "You would now be an enemy, in the third class, of my own organization." "Only class?" I asked in the indignant tones which Queen Victoria surely used when she received the Abyssinian Order of Chastity, Second Class.
    Kyril Bonfiglioli

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