DICT.TW Dictionary Taiwan
216.73.216.216
Search for:
Search type:
Return Definitions
Match headwords exactly
Match prefixes
Match prefixes (skip, count)
Match substring occurring anywhere in a headword
Match suffixes
POSIX 1003.2 (modern) regular expressions
Old (basic) regular expressions
Match using SOUNDEX algorithm
Match headwords within Levenshtein distance one
Match separate words within headwords
Match the first word within headwords
Match the last word within headwords
Database:
Any
First match
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
DICT.TW 注音查詢、中文輸入法字典
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
Network Terminology
MDBG CC-CEDICT Chinese-English Dictionary 漢英字典
Japanese-English Electronic Dictionary 和英電子辞書
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
WordNet (r) 2.0
Elements database 20001107
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
▼
[Show options]
[
Pronunciation
] [
Help
] [
Database Info
] [
Server Info
]
1 definition found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Sort
,
n.
1.
A
kind
or
species
;
any
number
or
collection
of
individual
persons
or
things
characterized
by
the
same
or
like
qualities
;
a
class
or
order
;
as
,
a
sort
of
men
;
a
sort
of
horses
;
a
sort
of
trees
;
a
sort
of
poems
.
2.
Manner
;
form
of
being
or
acting
.
Which
for
my
part
I
covet
to
perform
,
In
sort
as
through
the
world
I
did
proclaim
. --
Spenser
.
Flowers
,
in
such
sort
worn
,
can
neither
be
smelt
nor
seen
well
by
those
that
wear
them
.
--
Hooker
.
I'll
deceive
you
in
another
sort
.
--
Shak
.
To
Adam
in
what
sort
Shall
I
appear
? --
Milton
.
I
shall
not
be
wholly
without
praise
,
if
in
some
sort
I
have
copied
his
style
.
--
Dryden
.
3.
Condition
above
the
vulgar
;
rank
. [
Obs
.]
4.
A
chance
group
;
a
company
of
persons
who
happen
to
be
together
;
a
troop
;
also
,
an
assemblage
of
animals
. [
Obs
.]
“A
sort
of
shepherds.”
--
Spenser
.
“A
sort
of
steers.”
--
Spenser
.
“A
sort
of
doves.”
--
Dryden
.
“A
sort
of
rogues.”
--
Massinger
.
A
boy
,
a
child
,
and
we
a
sort
of
us
,
Vowed
against
his
voyage
. --
Chapman
.
5.
A
pair
;
a
set
;
a
suit
.
6.
pl.
Print.
Letters
,
figures
,
points
,
marks
,
spaces
,
or
quadrats
,
belonging
to
a
case
,
separately
considered
.
Out of sorts
Print.
,
with
some
letters
or
sorts
of
type
deficient
or
exhausted
in
the
case
or
font
;
hence
,
colloquially
,
out
of
order
;
ill
;
vexed
;
disturbed
.
To run upon sorts
Print.
,
to
use
or
require
a
greater
number
of
some
particular
letters
,
figures
,
or
marks
than
the
regular
proportion
,
as
,
for
example
,
in
making
an
index
.
Syn:
--
Kind
;
species
;
rank
;
condition
.
Usage:
Sort
,
Kind
.
Kind
originally
denoted
things
of
the
same
family
,
or
bound
together
by
some
natural
affinity
;
and
hence
,
a
class
.
Sort
signifies
that
which
constitutes
a
particular
lot
of
parcel
,
not
implying
necessarily
the
idea
of
affinity
,
but
of
mere
assemblage
.
the
two
words
are
now
used
to
a
great
extent
interchangeably
,
though
sort
(
perhaps
from
its
original
meaning
of
lot
)
sometimes
carries
with
it
a
slight
tone
of
disparagement
or
contempt
,
as
when
we
say
,
that
sort
of
people
,
that
sort
of
language
.
As
when
the
total
kind
Of
birds
,
in
orderly
array
on
wing
,
Came
summoned
over
Eden
to
receive
Their
names
of
there
. --
Milton
.
None
of
noble
sort
Would
so
offend
a
virgin
. --
Shak
.
DICT.TW
About DICT.TW
•
Contact Webmaster
•
Index
•
Links