释义 |
status
stat·us S0721600 (stăt′əs, stā′təs) n. 1. Position relative to that of others; standing: Her status is that of a guest. 2. High standing; prestige: a position of status in the community. 3. Law The legal character or condition of a person or thing: the status of a minor. 4. The state of affairs; the situation: What is the status of the negotiations? See Synonyms at state. [Latin; see stā- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] Usage Note: In our 2016 survey, 85 percent of the Usage Panel preferred the pronunciation (stăt′əs) and 15 percent preferred (stā′təs), although both forms were considered acceptable by large margins. This is a noticeable shift from our 1997 survey, which was the first time the Panelists, by a narrow margin, preferred (stăt′əs) over (stā′təs). The pronunciation (stā′təs) is the older pronunciation, and it remains the most common one in British English. status (ˈsteɪtəs) n, pl -tuses1. (Sociology) a social or professional position, condition, or standing to which varying degrees of responsibility, privilege, and esteem are attached2. the relative position or standing of a person or thing3. a high position or standing; prestige: he has acquired a new status since he has been in that job. 4. (Law) the legal standing or condition of a person5. a state of affairs[C17: from Latin: posture, from stāre to stand]sta•tus (ˈsteɪ təs, ˈstæt əs) n., pl. -tus•es. 1. the position of an individual in relation to another or others; social or professional standing. 2. high position or standing; prestige. 3. state or condition of affairs: What is the status of the contract negotiations? 4. the standing of a person before the law. [1665–75; < Latin: the condition of standing, stature, status =sta-, variant s. of stāre to stand + -tus suffix of v. action] Status (See also SUBORDINATION.) above the salt Among the distinguished or honored guests at a dinner; of high rank, important; also the opposite below the salt. Formerly a large saltcellar, i.e., a salt shaker or mill, was customarily placed in the middle of dining tables. The higher-ranking guests were seated at the upper or master’s end of the table, above the salt, while those of lesser rank were seated at the lower end of the table, below the salt. The phrase has been in use since the late 16th century. Though of Tory sentiments, she by no means approved of those feudal times when the chaplain was placed below the salt. (James Payn, The Luck of the Darrells, 1885) blueblood An aristocrat or noble; a thoroughbred. Fair-skinned Spaniards prided themselves on their pure stock, without Moorish or Jewish admixture. Their extremely light complexions revealed a bluish cast to their veins, which they consequently believed carried blue blood, as opposed to the supposed black blood of Moors and Jews. bluestocking See SCHOLARLINESS. born in the purple Of royal or exalted birth. Purple has long been associated with royalty because of its former scarcity and consequent costliness. It was obtainable only by processing huge quantities of a certain mollusk, which was harvested at Tyre, an ancient seaport of Phoenicia, and was called Tyrian purple. Born in the purple is a literal translation of Porphyrogenitus, a surname of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII (905-959) and his successors, most accurately applied only to those born during their father’s reign; it was customary for the Empress to undergo childbirth in a room whose walls were lined with purple. Today born to the purple is more commonly heard. born with a silver spoon in one’s mouth Born to wealth and high station. It was formerly customary for godparents to give spoons as christening gifts. The child born to wealth could anticipate a silver one from the moment of his birth. born within the sound of Bow bells A British expression denoting a Londoner, especially of the lower classes; a native of the East End district; a Cockney. The church of St. Mary-le-Bow, so called because of the bows or arches that supported its steeple, was known for the peal of its bells, which could be heard throughout the city. The phrase has been used to denote a Cockney since the early 17th century. brown-bagger A person of inferior status or social standing. In the United States, the term derives from the practice of the less well-to-do, such as blue-collar workers, to carry their lunches in brown paper bags. In Britain, a brown-bagger is a nonresident student at public school or university; his brown bag is the attaché case in which he carries his books. Such students are usually looked upon with a degree of disdain or condescension by those in residence. chief cook and bottle washer See PERSONAGE. codfish aristocracy A disparaging appellation for the nouveau riche, originally those Massachusetts aristocrats who made their money from the codfishing industry; also the codfish gentility. This expression, which dates from 1849, was the title of a poem written in the 1920s by American journalist Wallace Irwin. The first stanza reads as follows: Of all the fish that swim or swish In ocean’s deep autocracy, There’s none possess such haughtiness As the codfish aristocracy. the Four Hundred The social elite; the wealthy, refined people generally regarded as “high society.” This term dates from 1889 when Ward McAllister, a prominent New York socialite, was given the task of deciding who should be invited to a centenary celebration of the inauguration of George Washington. His list included the names of four hundred people whom he considered to be the true elite, the crème de la crème, as it were. Although the list received rapid acceptance and the term the Four Hundred became an overnight sensation, the number was raised to eight hundred in 1904 by Mrs. William Astor, the grande dame of New York society. To social strivers she is the Queen of the 400. (Coronet, August, 1948) gallery gods Those members of a theater audience occupying the highest, and therefore the cheapest, seats; those persons sitting in the balcony or gallery of a theater. The OED attributes this expression to the fact that persons occupying gallery seats are on high, as are the gods. However, another source credits the painting on the ceiling over the gallery in London’s Drury Lane Theatre as the inspiration for this expression. The ceiling in question is painted to resemble a cloudy blue sky peopled by numerous flying cupids. Thus, it is in reference to the cupids painted on the ceiling above their heads that persons sitting in the gallery first became known as gods or gallery gods. The term dates from the latter half of the 18th century. gentleman of the four outs A man without manners, wit, money, or credit —the four marks of a true gentleman. This subtle expression used by Englishmen to denote an upstart has been in use at least since the late 18th century. Sometimes the expression varies according to whether the “essentials” are considered more or less than four in number. A gentleman of three outs—“out of pocket, out of elbows, and out of credit.” (Edward Lytton, Paul Clifford, 1830) grass roots The common people, the working class; the rank and file of a political party; the voters. At the beginning of this century the term was used to mean ‘source or origin,’ the fundamental or basic level of any thing. This figurative extension of literal grass roots later acquired the political dimension denoting the people of rural or agricultural sections of the country as a factional, economic, or social group. Finally, grass roots was extended to include not just farmers and inhabitants of rural areas but the common people in general, or the rank and file of a political party or social organization. “No crisis so grave has confronted our people” since the Civil War, Mr. Lowden told the grassroots convention at Springfield. (Nation, June, 1935) the great unwashed The general public, the masses; hoi polloi. Although its coinage has been attributed to Edmund Burke (1729-97), this phrase has been in print only since the early 19th century. Gentlemen, there can be but little doubt that your ancestors were the Great Unwashed. (William Makepeace Thackeray, The History of Pendennis, 1850) low man on the totem pole The lowest in rank, the least important or experienced person; a neophyte. A totem pole is a tree trunk with symbolic carvings or paintings one above the other. North American Indians placed such poles in front of their houses. The apparent hierarchical arrangement of the symbols may have given rise to the current meaning of totem pole, which retains only the idea of ‘hierarchy.’ Thus, the low man on the totem pole refers to one who is at the bottom in the ordering of rank. Its popularity is undoubtedly partly owing to a comic novel, Low Man on the Totem Pole, by humorist H. Allen Smith. The following citation from Webster’s Third shows the corresponding use of the phrase for one of superior rank: … entertain top men on the political totem pole. (Mary Thayer) pecking order Hierarchy; the levels of authority within a group of people or an organization; one’s relative degree of predominance, aggressiveness, or power in comparison to others. This expression alludes to dominance hierarchy—a zoological term for the instinctive vertical ranking among birds and social mammals, in which the stronger animals assert their dominance over the smaller, weaker ones. Among domestic fowl, particularly chickens, the hierarchy becomes virtually uncontested; thus, the bird highest on the barnyard totem pole can peck at the dominated without worry of retaliation. Hence, avian dominance hierarchy came to be known as pecking order and, by extension, pecking order developed its figurative application to the hierarchy of authority and domination in human affairs. ragtag and bobtail The rabble, the riffraff, the masses; also, everyone collectively, the whole lot, every man Jack, every Tom, Dick, and Harry. The term, of British origin, was originally tag, then tag and rag; later the two words were reversed; still later the addition of bobtail (credited by some to Samuel Pepys) completed the term as we know it. Its component words all relate to worthless shreds, tatters, remnants, etc. The expression is sometimes extended to indicate comprehensiveness—every last one—as it was in this passage from T. A. Trollope’s What I Remember (1887): He shall have them all, rag, tag, and bobtail. the rank and file The general membership of an organization, as distinct from its leaders or officers; the lower echelons; the common people in general, hoi polloi. The origin of the term is military, rank and file being used to denote common soldiers (privates and corporals as opposed to commissioned officers) since the 18th century; for these were the men commonly required to line up in such formation: rank ‘a number of soldiers drawn up in line abreast’; file ’the number of men constituting the depth from front to rear of a formation in line’ (OED). By the 19th century the term was popular in government and political circles, as it still is today. One of the mere rank and file of the party. (John Stuart Mill, Considerations on Representative Government, 1860) run-of-the-mill Average, common, routine; mediocre, ordinary, no great shakes. This commonly used adjective is derived from its application to lots of manufactured goods which have not been inspected and consequently not sorted and graded for quality. By extension the term describes persons lacking in originality or individuality, those who through blandness blend in with the masses. salt of the earth A person or group of persons epitomizing the best, most noble, and most admirable elements of society; a paragon; the wealthy aristocracy. For centuries, salt has been used in religious ceremonies as a symbol of goodness, purity, and incorruptibility. Thus, it was praise of the highest order when, after preaching the Beatitudes at the Sermon on the Mount, Christ called His disciples the “salt of the earth.” You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how shall its saltness be restored? It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trodden underfoot by men. (Matthew 5:13) top billing Stardom. A phrase describing the most prominent or important in a group of persons, events, etc. In theater advertisements and billboards, billing is the relative position in which a person or act is listed. “Top billing,” then, is the most prominent position, usually above the name of the play, and is reserved for an actor or actress who has attained stardom, one whose name is readily recognized by the public. He made his Broadway debut as Lancelot in Camelot, with billing below the title; now, he is returning to Broadway, with top billing. (Globe ù Mail [Toronto], January 13, 1968) Although still most commonly used in reference to the theater, the scope of top billing has been expanded to include application in other contexts as well. top-drawer See EXCELLENCE. top-shelf See EXCELLENCE. to the manner born Destined by birth to observe certain patterns of behavior, usually those associated with good breeding and high social status; also, innately or peculiarly suited for a particular position. This latter use is becoming increasingly common. One “to the manner born” is a “natural” with an instinctive ability in a given area. The former meaning is still the more accurate, however. Shakespeare’s Hamlet gave us the expression when he criticized Claudius’ and Denmark’s drinking customs: But to my mind, though I am native here And to the manner born, it is a custom More honored in the breach than the observance. (I, iv) upper crust The highest social stratum; the wealthy; the aristocracy. This expression originated from the former custom of serving the upper crust of a loaf of bread to the most distinguished guests. As used today, the phrase often carries a suggestion of snobbery. He took a fashionable house and hobnobbed lavishly with Washington’s tight-ringed upper crust. (Newsweek, July, 1946) ThesaurusNoun | 1. | status - the relative position or standing of things or especially persons in a society; "he had the status of a minor"; "the novel attained the status of a classic"; "atheists do not enjoy a favorable position in American life"positionstate - the way something is with respect to its main attributes; "the current state of knowledge"; "his state of health"; "in a weak financial state"face - status in the eyes of others; "he lost face"election - the status or fact of being elected; "they celebrated his election"equivalence, par, equality, equation - a state of being essentially equal or equivalent; equally balanced; "on a par with the best"social rank, social station, social status, rank - position in a social hierarchy; "the British are more aware of social status than Americans are"standing - social or financial or professional status or reputation; "of equal standing"; "a member in good standing"high status - a position of superior statushigh ground - a position of superiority over opponents or competitorshigh profile - a position attracting much attention and publicityHoly Order, Order - (usually plural) the status or rank or office of a Christian clergyman in an ecclesiastical hierarchy; "theologians still disagree over whether `bishop' should or should not be a separate Order"low status, lowness, lowliness - a position of inferior status; low in station or rank or fortune or estimationlegal status - a status defined by lawbar sinister, bastardy, illegitimacy - the status of being born to parents who were not marriedleft-handedness - the status of being born of a morganatic marriagecommand - a position of highest authority; "the corporation has just undergone a change in command"nationality - the status of belonging to a particular nation by birth or naturalizationfooting, terms - status with respect to the relations between people or groups; "on good terms with her in-laws"; "on a friendly footing"retirement - the state of being retired from one's business or occupationrank - relative status; "his salary was determined by his rank and seniority"caste - social status or position conferred by a system based on class; "lose caste by doing work beneath one's station"dignity - high office or rank or station; "he respected the dignity of the emissaries"noblesse, nobility - the state of being of noble birthordination - the status of being ordained to a sacred officepedestal - a position of great esteem (and supposed superiority); "they put him on a pedestal"leadership - the status of a leader; "they challenged his leadership of the union"slot - a position in a hierarchy or organization; "Bob Dylan occupied the top slot for several weeks"; "she beat some tough competition for the number one slot"toehold - a relatively insignificant position from which future progress might be made; "American diplomacy provided a toehold on which to proceed toward peace talks"; "his father gave him a toehold in the oil business" | | 2. | status - a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations"conditionstate - the way something is with respect to its main attributes; "the current state of knowledge"; "his state of health"; "in a weak financial state"diversity - the condition or result of being changeableanchorage - the condition of being secured to a base; "the plant needs a firm anchorage"; "the mother provides emotional anchorage for the entire family"health - the general condition of body and mind; "his delicate health"; "in poor health"mode - a particular functioning condition or arrangement; "switched from keyboard to voice mode"ecological niche, niche - (ecology) the status of an organism within its environment and community (affecting its survival as a species)noise conditions - the condition of being noisy (as in a communication channel)participation, involvement - the condition of sharing in common with others (as fellows or partners etc.)prepossession - the condition of being prepossessed; "the king's prepossession in my favor is very valuable"regularisation, regularization - the condition of having been made regular (or more regular)saturation - a condition in which a quantity no longer responds to some external influencesilence - the state of being silent (as when no one is speaking); "there was a shocked silence"; "he gestured for silence"situation, position - a condition or position in which you find yourself; "the unpleasant situation (or position) of having to choose between two evils"; "found herself in a very fortunate situation"ski conditions - the amount and state of snow for skiingnomination - the condition of having been proposed as a suitable candidate for appointment or election; "there was keen competition for the nomination"; "his nomination was hotly protested"standardisation, standardization - the condition in which a standard has been successfully established; "standardization of nuts and bolts had saved industry millions of dollars"stigmatism - (optics) condition of an optical system (as a lens) in which light rays from a single point converge in a single focal pointastigmatism, astigmia - (optics) defect in an optical system in which light rays from a single point fail to converge in a single focal pointway - the condition of things generally; "that's the way it is"; "I felt the same way"circumstance - a condition that accompanies or influences some event or activityhomelessness - the state or condition of having no home (especially the state of living in the streets)reinstatement - the condition of being reinstated; "her reinstatement to her former office followed quickly"place - proper or appropriate position or location; "a woman's place is no longer in the kitchen"celibacy - an unmarried statusvirginity - the condition or quality of being a virgininnocence - a state or condition of being innocent of a specific crime or offense; "the trial established his innocence"sinlessness, whiteness, innocence, pureness, purity - the state of being unsullied by sin or moral wrong; lacking a knowledge of evilguilt, guiltiness - the state of having committed an offenseencapsulation - the condition of being enclosed (as in a capsule); "the encapsulation of tendons in membranous sheaths"polarisation, polarization - the condition of having or giving polarityphysical condition, physiological condition, physiological state - the condition or state of the body or bodily functionshyalinisation, hyalinization - the state of being hyaline or having become hyaline; "the patient's arterioles showed marked hyalinization"vacuolation, vacuolisation, vacuolization - the state of having become filled with vacuolesprotuberance - the condition of being protuberant; the condition of bulging out; "the protuberance of his belly"curvature - (medicine) a curving or bending; often abnormal; "curvature of the spine"mental condition, mental state, psychological condition, psychological state - (psychology) a mental condition in which the qualities of a state are relatively constant even though the state itself may be dynamic; "a manic state"difficulty - a condition or state of affairs almost beyond one's ability to deal with and requiring great effort to bear or overcome; "grappling with financial difficulties"melioration, improvement - a condition superior to an earlier condition; "the new school represents a great improvement"declination, decline - a condition inferior to an earlier condition; a gradual falling off from a better stateennoblement - the state of being nobleascendance, ascendancy, ascendence, ascendency, dominance, control - the state that exists when one person or group has power over another; "her apparent dominance of her husband was really her attempt to make him pay attention to her" |
statusnoun1. position, rank, grade, degree, ranking promoted to the status of foreman2. prestige, standing, authority, note, influence, weight, reputation, honour, importance, consequence, fame, distinction, eminence, renown, mana (N.Z.) She cheated banks to satisfy her desire for money and status.3. state of play, development, progress, condition, evolution, progression Please keep us informed of the status of this project.statusnoun1. Positioning of one individual vis-à-vis others:footing, place, position, rank, situation, standing, station.2. The level of credit or respect at which one is regarded by others:face, prestige, standing.3. An established position from which to operate or deal with others:basis, footing, term (often used in plural).4. A person's high standing among others:dignity, good name, good report, honor, prestige, reputation, repute, respect.5. Manner of being or form of existence:condition, mode, situation, state.Translationsstatus (ˈsteitəs) , ((American also) ˈstӕ-) noun1. the position of a person with regard to his legal rights etc. If she marries a foreigner, will her status as a British citizen be affected? 身分 身分2. a person's social rank. 地位 地位status symbol a possession that indicates one's social importance. a car, a private swimming-pool and other status symbols. 表示人地位高的東西 表示人地位高的东西status
challenge the status quoTo behave or do something in a way contrary to that which is generally accepted or expected. I love this filmmaker, his movies really challenge the status quo! It can be risky, but challenging the status quo can be a great way to get ahead in business.See also: challenge, quo, statusthe status quoThe condition or state of affairs as it already exists or operates. Despite their myriad promises, politicians are inevitably more interested in maintaining the status quo, which is more profitable for them and their corporate buddies.See also: quo, statusstatus symbolSomething, especially that which is very expensive and flashy, that someone owns and displays as a means of showing of their wealth or success. In this part of the city, expensive sneakers and designer sweatshirts are the real status symbols. Nothing says "status symbol" like a single person buying a 25,000 square foot mansion all for themselves.See also: status, symbolstatus seekerSomeone who uses conniving, self-serving, or manipulative tactics in order to rise to higher socioeconomic levels. The film has chosen to depict the brilliant young businesswoman as some kind of status seeker who used her friends and connections in order to advance her own career and place in society.See also: statusstatus quoThe existing condition or state of affairs, as in We don't want to admit more singers to the chorus; we like the status quo. This term, Latin for "state in which," has been used in English since the early 1800s. See also: quo, statusstatus symbolA position or activity that allows one's social prestige to be displayed, as in She doesn't even drive; that car of hers is purely a status symbol. [Mid-1900s] See also: status, symbolthe status ˈquo (from Latin) the situation as it is now, or as it was before a recent change: The conservatives are keen to maintain the status quo.See also: quo, statusa ˈstatus symbol an expensive possession which shows people that you are rich: These cars are regarded as status symbols in Britain.See also: status, symbolstatus symbolA possession or privilege that is a mark of one’s social standing. Dating from the mid-twentieth century, this term is often used sarcastically, in effect deriding anyone who relies on status symbols for a sense of worth. The New York Times used it on September 3, 2000, in an article by Geraldine Fabrikant about lawyer Johnnie L. Cochran’s purchasing a private plane: “Mr. Cochran . . . is now hitting the major money leagues as well, and he has the status-symbol issue down pat.”See also: status, symbolstatus seekerSomeone who aspires to a higher socioeconomic level. Upward mobility have always been an aspect of American society, but it took sociologist Vance Packard's 1959 book The Status Seekers to give a name to people who strove to impress by acquiring and flaunting fashionable and expensive items and social cachet. Status seekers—the derogatory epithet quickly gained popularity—not only tried to keep up with the Jones, they wanted to leave the Jones behind.See also: statusstatus
status Law the legal standing or condition of a person status - any stable position within a social system associated with specific expectations, rights and duties. 'Status’ in this sense is equivalent to ROLE, although it is the latter term which has the wider currency.
- the positive or negative honour, prestige, power, etc., attaching to a position, or an individual person, within a system of SOCIAL STRATIFICATION (often referred to as social status).
Both conceptions derive from forms of society in which individual social locations were relatively fixed (see ASCRIBED STATUS, MAINE), for example by religion or by law (see CASTE, ESTATE). In modern societies status positions tend to be more fluid. See also STATUS GROUP, CLASS, STATUS AND PARTY, SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS, STATUS CONSISTENCY AND INCONSISTENCY.Status in the Hamito-Semitic languages, a grammatical category of the noun that determines whether the noun is definite and whether it has a relationship with other parts of the sentence; in particular, whether the noun has a genitival attribute. A noun’s status also indicates possession, as in Arabic - i(”my”), and demonstrativeness, as in Somali -k-an (”this,” masculine) and -t-an (”this,” feminine). The category of status exists in the Semitic, Coptic, Berber, Cushitic and Chad languages. It is expressed by means of suffixes, prefixes, internal inflection, and distinctions in declensional paradigms. REFERENCESD’iakonov, I. M. Semito-khamitskie iazyki. Moscow, 1965. Tucker, A. N., and M. A. Bryan. The Non-Bantu Languages ofNorth-Eastern Africa. London, 1966.status
status [sta´tus, stat´us] (L.) state, particularly in reference to a morbid condition.absence status sustained clouding of consciousness for several hours, with no interval of normal mental activity, and with few stereotyped movements or no abnormal motor activity.status asthma´ticus a particularly severe episode of asthma that does not respond adequately to ordinary therapeutic measures and usually requires hospitalization.status epilep´ticus rapid succession of epileptic spasms without intervals of consciousness; brain damage may result.status lympha´ticus lymphatism.performance status ability of a patient to function, as measured by a scale" >performance scale.status thymicolympha´ticus a condition resembling lymphatism, with enlargement of lymphadenoid tissue and of the thymus as the special influencing factor; formerly thought to be the cause of sudden death in children.status verruco´sus a wartlike appearance of the cerebral cortex, produced by disorderly arrangement of the neuroblasts, so that the formation of fissures and sulci is irregular and unpredictable.status (omaha) in the omaha system, the condition of the client in relation to objective and subjective defining characteristics.sta·tus (stā'tŭs, stat'ŭs), The correct plural of this word is status, not stati.A state or condition. [L. a way of standing] status Medtalk A condition or state. See Code status, Diversion status, DNI status, ECOG performance status, Mental status, Provisional status, Serostatus, Socioeconomic status. sta·tus (stat'ŭs) A state or condition. [L. a way of standing]sta·tus (stat'ŭs) The correct plural of this word is status, not stati.A state or condition. [L. a way of standing]Status
StatusThe standing, state, or condition of an individual; the rights, obligations, capacities, and incapacities that assign an individual to a given class. For example, the term status is used in reference to the legal state of being an infant, a ward, or a prisoner, as well as in reference to a person's social standing in the community. STATUS. The condition of persons. It also means estate, because it signifies the condition or circumstances in which the owner stands with regard to his property. 2 Bouv. Inst. n. 1689. See STS
STATUS
Acronym | Definition |
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STATUS➣Still Too Arrogant to Understand Success | STATUS➣Specialist Transport Advisory and Testing Utility Society (UK) | STATUS➣Specialized Technical and Technology User Services | STATUS➣Students Taking Action to Terminate Unlawful Substances (drug prevention group) | STATUS➣Specialized Technical and Technology User Support (online learning) |
status
Synonyms for statusnoun positionSynonyms- position
- rank
- grade
- degree
- ranking
noun prestigeSynonyms- prestige
- standing
- authority
- note
- influence
- weight
- reputation
- honour
- importance
- consequence
- fame
- distinction
- eminence
- renown
- mana
noun state of playSynonyms- state of play
- development
- progress
- condition
- evolution
- progression
Synonyms for statusnoun positioning of one individual vis-à-vis othersSynonyms- footing
- place
- position
- rank
- situation
- standing
- station
noun the level of credit or respect at which one is regarded by othersSynonymsnoun an established position from which to operate or deal with othersSynonymsnoun a person's high standing among othersSynonyms- dignity
- good name
- good report
- honor
- prestige
- reputation
- repute
- respect
noun manner of being or form of existenceSynonyms- condition
- mode
- situation
- state
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