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What exactly is a class? Is it the period of time of one subject? Is a subject a class? Is class a group of people or is that a grade? Is a grade a level or is it an ABCDEF in the score? I have a feeling the English language is left with "class" and "grade" for all terms. That might not be true because I might be missing the true names of these things.

So how do you say these?

  • People who are being studied things
  • A subject
  • An ABCDEF
  • A place where people study
  • A period of time during which people who are being studied things sit and learn
Foxcat385
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    Like many other words in the English language, class has many possible uses and meanings. – John Clifford Mar 29 '16 at 20:21
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    Pretty much all of the above. – Hot Licks Mar 29 '16 at 20:25
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    And like many ideas that can be expressed in English, there are multiple terms for most of those. – PellMel Mar 29 '16 at 20:28
  • Are there specific words that have exactly one meaning in school context? – Foxcat385 Mar 29 '16 at 20:29
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    Define "school context". There are zillions of different schools, in many different countries and cultures. – Drew Mar 29 '16 at 20:36
  • People who are being studied things?? An ABCDEF? The question is slightly dodgy. – Lambie Mar 29 '16 at 20:38
  • @Lambie slightly? – John Clifford Mar 29 '16 at 20:40
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    I think you mean "people who are being taught things" and "people who study things". ABCDF are grades which are a representative of the student's success or failure at mastering the material taught in the class. A = passed with a high degree of mastery / F = failed to pass the requirements to demonstrate mastery of the material taught in the class. – Kristina Lopez Mar 29 '16 at 20:43
  • And "school terms" (cf. title) are the semesters or other periods of time during which a course runs from start to finish. – Steven Littman Mar 29 '16 at 21:12
  • Sorry. English is not my main language. In my main language "study" and "teach" are the same word. – Foxcat385 Mar 29 '16 at 21:24
  • While ABCDF is the usual nomenclature for student scores in the US (either on individual tests/projects or the combined work for a period of time), the terms used are almost always "grade" or "score" (not "ABCDF"), and sometimes the values "excellent", "good", "fair", "poor", and "unsatisfactory" are used, or some other such scheme. This often varies with age level. Overall scores over several years are apt to be rolled into some sort of numerical "grade point average", though again the schemes vary. – Hot Licks Mar 29 '16 at 23:36

2 Answers2

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Your wording "people [...] being studied things" is non-idiomatic. If people are being studied then someone else is trying to learn something about them. From context, I think you mean people being taught things. That indicates that someone is trying to instruct the people in question ("taught" being the past tense of "to teach").

Merriam-Webster gives these four meanings for "class" in school context (along with several others in different contexts):

a : a body of students meeting regularly to study the same subject

Example: "My Biology class dissected frogs today." Perhaps this is what you meant by "People who are being studied things".

b : the period during which such a body meets

Example: "Turn off your cell phones during class." This seems to match your "period of time during which people who are being studied things sit and learn."

c : a course of instruction

Example: "I need only four more classes to graduate!" This is similar to a "subject", and in some circumstances and localities the two might be used interchangeably.

d : a body of students or alumni whose year of graduation is the same

Example: "This bench is a gift from the class of 2011." This one is not among the terms you asked about.

You also asked about "An ABCDEF", which would be called one of a "grade" or a "mark" in most English-speaking locales.

"A place where people study" could be a "classroom", but also many other things ("study hall", "library", "study", "bedroom", and many more).

PellMel
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So how do you say these? In Australia... (not sure if you'd find this interesting at all, but any way). A lot of terms also differ depending on primary/secondary or tertiary education.

People who are being taught things are students (for both Primary/Secondary & Tertiary)

A subject is something like mathematics, English, history, calculus, etc. They are the same for both primary/secondary and tertiary.

An ABCDEF is known as a grade for both primary/secondary and tertiary. However while school is scored as A-F, tertiary is scored on a 1-7 scale (with 7 being a high distinction, and less than 3 being a fail) and known as a grade, hence the term Grade Point Average (GPA).

The place where people learn, would just be the classroom at school. At university, we have different names depending on the function of the room, such as lecture theatre or tutorial room.

A period of time during which people who are being studied things sit and learn is known as a class (for both school and University).

Inazuma
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