Meaning Subject
What does Subject mean? Here you find 87 meanings of the word Subject. You can also add a definition of Subject yourself

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Subject


As a noun:
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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A category used in a hierarchical list to correlate and organize information. Subjects are used in the subject tree to organize products, sales literature, and knowledge base articles.
Source: msdn.microsoft.com

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Relationships Synonym:  topic Distinguish From:  genre n. ~ 1. A principal theme or topic of a work. - 2. Visual arts · The content described or depicted in a work. Notes:  A subject1 may be a person, [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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Refers to a bid or offer that cannot be executed without confirmation from the customer. In other words, not firm, but a bid/offer that needs additional information/confirmation before becoming firm a [..]
Source: nasdaq.com

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Subject


A subject is a theme or group of themes.
Source: naxos.com (offline)

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(1) The principal object (person, animal, thing) in a photograph or being photographed. (2) A theme or topic in photography. (3) The most essential object in a photograph, without which the photograph [..]
Source: photographytips.com

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This term is used to refer to the consumer who is disputing information on his/her credit file as belonging to someone with the same/similar name.
Source: help.equifax.com (offline)

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late 14c., "to make (a person or nation) subject to another by force," also "to render submissive or dependent," from Medieval Latin subiectare "place beneath," frequenta [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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early 14c., from Old French suget, subject (Modern French sujet), from Latin subiectus (see subject (n.)).
Source: etymonline.com

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A person from whom information is secured in a marketing research study, either by questioning or by observing him or her in some way.
Source: ama.org (offline)

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person under the authority of a monarch or other powerful ruler.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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A wonderfully vague term that covers: an entire film, the things and people lenses are aimed at, and this author's need for a genderless word to avoid countless "he or she" constructions.
Source: lowel.tiffen.com (offline)

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capable: possibly accepting or permitting; "a passage capable of misinterpretation"; "open to interpretation"; "an issue open to questi [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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A member of the control group or the treatment group.
Source: stat.berkeley.edu

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The subject or of a sentence is the noun, pronoun or noun phrase that precedes and governs the main verb.EG. He is a really nice guy. ('He' is the subject of the sentence, controlling the ve [..]
Source: usingenglish.com

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The person, place or thing the sentence is about.
Source: schoolatoz.nsw.edu.au (offline)

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1. In cryptography, an entity whose public key is certified in a public key certificate. 2. Generally, a person, process, or device, causing information to flow among objects or change to the system state. [INFOSEC-99]   3.    An active entity, generally in the form of a person, process, executing program or device that causes information to flow a [..]
Source: atis.org (offline)

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What a story or play is about; to be distinguished from plot
Source: highered.mheducation.com (offline)

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Usually the person or thing who is performing the action of a verb. More technically the grammatical subject is the part of a sentence of which an action is predicated: 'the man patted the dog� [..]
Source: english.cam.ac.uk

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An element in the structure of a clause usually filled by a noun group, for example 'The dog (subject) was barking'. The subject indicates who or what gives agency or attributes to the [..]
Source: syllabus.bostes.nsw.edu.au

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 – the person, object, or topic of focus in literature
Source: phccwritingcenter.org

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A subdivision of the three disciplines. For example, the discipline of science includes the subjects of chemistry and biology. May also refer to a controlled vocabulary term used in a database. (Unit [..]
Source: usg.edu

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Definition A bid or offer that does not have a specified price, and is negotiable. A broker might ask multiple dealers for a subject in order to try to find the best price for his or her order.
Source: investorwords.com

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The participant (either a human or non human) that is taken for the purpose of doing research. It also refers the area or branch of study. Like subject of english or psychology.
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Any one of the topics or themes of a work, stated explicitly in the text or title or implicit in its message. In library cataloging, a book or other item is assigned one or more subject headings as ac [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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The melody upon which a fugue is based; a melody, motive, or theme. The theme or melody upon which any composition is based.
Source: dictionary.onmusic.org

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The subject of a sentence or clause is the part of the sentence or clause about which something is being said. It is usually the doer of the action. It is a noun or a pronoun. All of the subjects on t [..]
Source: englishplus.com

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the person upon whose life a life insurance policy is written and upon whose death the policy is payable : insured compare beneficiary, policyholder
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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A noun or pronoun which governs a verb (ie its inflection): I love you.
Source: quick-facts.co.uk

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A person, system or object with associated attributes.
Source: smartcardalliance.org

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that which can be drawn upon or utilized; means of doing something.
Source: econlib.org

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Subject is defined as "'a person whose conduct is within the scope of the grand jury's investigation.'" United States v. Hong Trinh, 638 F. Supp. 2d 143, 148 (D. Mass. 2009)
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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A subject is a particular area of study that the University offers courses in, eg, English, French, Mathematics or Geology. While you can study many subjects at 100-level, some subjects, eg, Counselli [..]
Source: canterbury.ac.nz

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In some institutions a unit of teaching over the semester or trimester is called a subject. See also course, unit, and module.
Source: studyinaustralia.gov.au

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See: Course
Source: my.unsw.edu.au

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(n) the subject matter of a conversation or discussion(n) something (a person or object or scene) selected by an artist or photographer for graphic representation(n) a branch of knowledge(n) some situ [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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An area of learning which may be provided by a school or a department, or by departments offering related courses.
Source: science.auckland.ac.nz (offline)

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See Object and Subject;
Source: marxists.org

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See unit.
Source: qut.edu.au

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The Dublin Core element used to describe the content of the resource. The element may use controlled vocabularies or keywords or phrases that describe the subject or content of the resource. See also [..]
Source: dublincore.org

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a general term for any rational person who is capable of having knowledge. (Cf. object; see also representation.)
Source: staffweb.hkbu.edu.hk (offline)

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A self-contained unit of study identified by a unique code.
Source: uow.edu.au (offline)

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Course in an academic discipline offered as part of a curriculum of an institution of higher learning.
Source: educationusa.state.gov

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'+ '' + 'Message
Source: locksmiths.co.uk (offline)

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A noun or pronoun.
Source: powerengineering.org (offline)

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Subjects are the specific topics of study which the University offers. Each subject has a name (e.g. History) and a four letter code (e.g. HIST). Each paper has a subject code as part of its paper cod [..]
Source: otago.ac.nz

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A well-defined and distinctive discipline of study.
Source: gla.ac.uk (offline)

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n. asignatura, materia
Source: trelliscompany.org

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A subject is a particular area of study in which the University offers courses, such as English, French, Mathematics, or Geology.
Source: uww.edu

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the theme of a fugue.
Source: canteach.ca

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Musical theme.
Source: laco.org

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[2] similar to a motive, but longer, normally applied to contrapuntal music.
Source: solomonsmusic.net (offline)

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see theme.
Source: dorakmt.tripod.com

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(subjekt): a clause element which comes in addition to the verb in all complete sentences. The subject is typically realized by a noun phrase.In declarative sentences the subject is usually placed in [..]
Source: folk.uio.no

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complement: another term for subject predicative.
Source: folk.uio.no

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predicative (subjektspredikativ): a clause element that comes in addition to a subject and a copular (two-place) verb. A subject predicative is normally placed after the copular verb. E.g. She is happ [..]
Source: folk.uio.no

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The main theme of a fugue.
Source: musicappreciation.com

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Theme.
Source: stocktonsymphony.org (offline)

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'+ '' + '
Source: darksky.org (offline)

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That what is being photographed, or a description thereof.
Source: ephotozine.com

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Persons who are enrolled in Research studies or who are otherwise the subjects of Research.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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the person, place, or thing about which something is said in a clause.
Source: grammarist.com

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The consituent of a clause which is the primary complement of the verb and about which something is said, e.g. speaker in the sentence The speaker was nervous.
Source: uni-due.de

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An area of study, e.g. Accounting, Biological Sciences, History.
Source: waikato.ac.nz

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The title of a work package.
Source: openproject.org

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the noun or pronoun that is performing the action in a sentence or clause, also the noun or pronoun that the sentence or clause is describing.
Source: aje.com

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In grammar and linguistics, the syntactic constituent of a simple sentence which contains the noun that the predicate acts upon or describes.
Source: thai-language.com

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A person, event or thing being investigated.
Source: iiss.biz

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the main topic of a piece of writing; what a story is about. A subject can be found in a sentence, a paragraph, an essay, or a book.
Source: scribendi.com

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a noun or pronoun that does the action (or "is" the state) e.g. "The rain came down in buckets." OR "Mary is beautiful." (see "predicate& [..]
Source: tefl.net

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 That part of the sentence or clause about which something is said. It is a word or group of words that identifies or describes who or what is doing what is being done. The subject is normally the doe [..]
Source: writingenglish.com

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> Category -> Subcategory taxonomy provides a series of pick lists for Protocol authors. After selecting a Subcategory, authors then enter a title for their specific Metric or Indicator.
Source: monitoringresources.org

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In , Connexion client, Dewey Decimal Classification, Searching WorldCat: An object of study. Also called topic. A subject may be a person or a group of persons, thing, place, process, activity, abstraction or any combination of these. Also, a content designator or topic. Subject schemes (for example, Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH)) use [..]
Source: oclc.org (offline)

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A course or area of study.
Source: myanmarstudyabroad.org

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'+ '' + 'Message
Source: adpushup.com

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What an artwork is about. A person, animal, object, or scene
Source: cfisd.net (offline)

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The person, object, event, or idea on which an artwork is based.
Source: armenianart.center

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Likely to be affected by or to experience something. ''a country subject to extreme heat'' * Dryden *: All human things are subject to decay. *la|subiectus||a subject, an inferior,+/?s?b.d??kt/ [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Refers to a bid or offer that cannot be executed without confirmation from the customer. In other words, not firm, but a bid/offer that needs additional information/confirmation before becoming firm a [..]
Source: people.duke.edu

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A subject is a being who has a unique consciousness and/or unique personal experiences, or an entity that has a relationship with another entity that exists outside itself (called an "object" [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Subject


Subject (Latin: subiectus "lying beneath") may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Subject


Subject (Latin: subiectus "lying beneath") may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Subject


Subject (Latin: subiectus "lying beneath") may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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The subject in a simple English sentence such as John runs, John is a teacher, or John was hit by a car is the person or thing about whom the statement is made, in this case 'John'. Traditionally the [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In music, a subject is the material, usually a recognizable melody, upon which part or all of a composition is based. In forms other than the fugue, this may be known as the theme.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Subject is R&B singer Dwele's 2003 debut album, released on Virgin Records.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In library and information science documents (such as books, articles and pictures) are classified and searched by subject - as well as by other attributes such as author, genre and document type. Thi [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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