society - WordReference.com Dictionary of English

society

UK:*UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/səˈsaɪəti/US:USA pronunciation: IPA and respellingUSA pronunciation: IPA/səˈsaɪɪti/ ,USA pronunciation: respelling(sə sīi tē)

Inflections of 'society' (n): npl: societies

WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2023
so•ci•e•ty /səˈsaɪɪti/USA pronunciation   n., pl. -ties, adj. 
n. 
  1. Sociology human beings thought of as a group and viewed as members of a community:[uncountable]the evolution of society.
  2. Sociologya highly structured system of human organization for a large-scale community: [uncountable]a look at American society.[countable]They studied societies of ancient Egypt and Greece.
  3. Sociology a group of people associated together for religious, cultural, scientific, or other purposes:[countable]an Irish-American cultural society.
  4. Sociology the social life of wealthy, well-known, or fashionable persons, or the class of these people:[uncountable]people in high society.

adj. [before a noun]
  1. of or relating to elegant society:a society photographer.
so•ci•e•tal /səˈsaɪɪtəl/USA pronunciation  adj.: the societal pressure put on teenagers to succeed.See -soc-.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2023
so•ci•e•ty  (sə sīi tē),USA pronunciation n., pl. -ties, adj. 
n. 
  1. Sociologyan organized group of persons associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes.
  2. Sociologya body of individuals living as members of a community;
    community.
  3. Sociologythe body of human beings generally, associated or viewed as members of a community:the evolution of human society.
  4. Sociologya highly structured system of human organization for large-scale community living that normally furnishes protection, continuity, security, and a national identity for its members:American society.
  5. Sociologysuch a system characterized by its dominant economic class or form:middle-class society; industrial society.
  6. Sociologythose with whom one has companionship.
  7. Sociologycompanionship;
    company:to enjoy one's society.
  8. Sociologythe social life of wealthy, prominent, or fashionable persons.
  9. Sociologythe social class that comprises such persons.
  10. Sociologythe condition of those living in companionship with others, or in a community, rather than in isolation.
  11. Ecology[Biol.]a closely integrated group of social organisms of the same species exhibiting division of labor.
  12. Religion[Eccles.]an ecclesiastical society.

adj. 
  1. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of elegant society:a society photographer.
  • Latin societās, equivalent. to soci(us) partner, comrade + -etās, variant of -itās- -ity
  • Middle French societe
  • 1525–35
so•cie•ty•less, adj. 
    • 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged association, fellowship, fraternity, brotherhood, company. See circle. 
    • 7.See corresponding entry in Unabridged fellowship.

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
society /səˈsaɪətɪ/ n ( pl -ties)
  1. the totality of social relationships among organized groups of human beings or animals
  2. a system of human organizations generating distinctive cultural patterns and institutions and usually providing protection, security, continuity, and a national identity for its members
  3. such a system with reference to its mode of social and economic organization or its dominant class: middle-class society
  4. those with whom one has companionship
  5. an organized group of people associated for some specific purpose or on account of some common interest: a learned society
  6. the privileged class of people in a community, esp as considered superior or fashionable
  7. (as modifier): a society woman
  8. the social life and intercourse of such people: to enter society as a debutante
  9. companionship; the fact or state of being together with someone else: I enjoy her society
  10. a small community of plants within a larger association
Etymology: 16th Century: via Old French societé from Latin societās, from socius a comrade
'society' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
Collocations: [modern, high, civil, historic, ancient, industrial] society, a society [function, wedding, event], [British, New York] society, more...

Forum discussions with the word(s) "society" in the title:


Look up "society" at Merriam-Webster
Look up "society" at dictionary.com
  • Go to Preferences page and choose from different actions for taps or mouse clicks.

In other languages: Spanish | French | Italian | Portuguese | Romanian | German | Dutch | Swedish | Russian | Polish | Czech | Greek | Turkish | Chinese | Japanese | Korean | Arabic

Advertisements
Advertisements
Report an inappropriate ad.
WordReference.com
WORD OF THE DAY
GET THE DAILY EMAIL!