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English Dictionary      examples: 'day', 'get rid of', 'New York Bay'




Course   /kɔrs/   Listen
Course

noun
1.
Education imparted in a series of lessons or meetings.  Synonyms: class, course of instruction, course of study.  "Flirting is not unknown in college classes"
2.
A connected series of events or actions or developments.  Synonym: line.  "Historians can only point out those lines for which evidence is available"
3.
General line of orientation.  Synonym: trend.  "The northeastern trend of the coast"
4.
A mode of action.  Synonym: course of action.  "Once a nation is embarked on a course of action it becomes extremely difficult for any retraction to take place"
5.
A line or route along which something travels or moves.  Synonyms: path, track.  "The track of an animal" , "The course of the river"
6.
A body of students who are taught together.  Synonyms: class, form, grade.
7.
Part of a meal served at one time.
8.
(construction) a layer of masonry.  Synonym: row.
9.
Facility consisting of a circumscribed area of land or water laid out for a sport.  "The course was less than a mile"
adverb
1.
As might be expected.  Synonyms: naturally, of course.
verb
(past & past part. coursed; pres. part. coursing)
1.
Move swiftly through or over.
2.
Move along, of liquids.  Synonyms: feed, flow, run.  "The Missouri feeds into the Mississippi"
3.
Hunt with hounds.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Course" Quotes from Famous Books



... office is agreeable, chiefly because it flatters our vanity, and is a proof of the kindness and esteem of the person, who performs it. The removal of the intention, removes the mortification in the one case, and vanity in the other, and must of course cause a remarkable diminution in the ...
— A Treatise of Human Nature • David Hume

... ways open by which he could reach Lyons: he must either pass through Avignon, or avoid it by taking a cross-road, which branched off the Pointet highway, two leagues outside the town. The assassins thought he would take the latter course, and on the 2nd of August, the day on which the marshal was expected, Pointu, Magnan, and Naudaud, with four of their creatures, took a carriage at six o'clock in the morning, and, setting out from the Rhone bridge, hid themselves by the side of the ...
— Celebrated Crimes, Complete • Alexandre Dumas, Pere

... and on going on deck at 7.30 found we were making straight for the sun. Most glorious morning, sun bright, sea, except for the eternal swell, perfectly calm. We had changed our course and were heading 8 degrees S. of E., making for the Straits of Gibraltar. At 8 the captain, wishing to be sure of his longitude, began bawling out to some unseen person, "Mark 23, 22; mark 23, 19, add another 1; mark 23, 25". He ...
— The Incomparable 29th and the "River Clyde" • George Davidson

... beyond mere courtesy, to have his request attended to, both have. The minister is left to decide for himself. He cannot so far abuse the courtesy that permits him to present his countrymen at all, as to present the domestic, and of course he declines doing it. In this case, perhaps, public opinion would sustain him, as, unluckily, the party of the domestics is small in America, the duties usually falling to the share of foreigners and blacks. But the principle may be carried upwards, until a point is attained ...
— Recollections of Europe • J. Fenimore Cooper

... scanty forces. The English and Americans, on the other hand, were far from conducting the struggle with the like temper as the French; yet with such enormous advantages as they possessed, if they could not conquer a satisfactory peace in course of time, they ought to be ashamed of themselves. So no composition could be arranged; the Seven Years' War began, and to open it with becoming eclat Braddock debarked, a gorgeous spectacle in red and gold. Yet still there had as yet been in Europe no ...
— Benjamin Franklin • John Torrey Morse, Jr.


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