quality
[ kwol-i-tee ]
/ ˈkwɒl ɪ ti /
noun, plural qual·i·ties.
adjective
Origin of quality
1250–1300; Middle English
qualite < Old French < Latin
quālitās, equivalent to
quāl(is) of what sort +
-itās
-ity
synonym study for quality
1.
Quality,
attribute,
property agree in meaning a particular characteristic (of a person or thing). A
quality is a characteristic, innate or acquired, that, in some particular, determines the nature and behavior of a person or thing:
naturalness as a quality; the quality of meat. An
attribute was originally a quality attributed, usually to a person or something personified; more recently it has meant a fundamental or innate characteristic:
an attribute of God; attributes of a logical mind.
Property applies only to things; it means a characteristic belonging specifically in the constitution of, or found (invariably) in, the behavior of a thing:
physical properties of uranium or of limestone.
OTHER WORDS FROM quality
qual·i·ty·less, adjective non·qual·i·ty, noun, plural non·qual·i·ties. sub·qual·i·ty, noun, plural sub·qual·i·ties.Words nearby quality
Example sentences from the Web for quality
British Dictionary definitions for quality
quality
/ (ˈkwɒlɪtɪ) /
noun plural -ties
Word Origin for quality
C13: from Old French
qualité, from Latin
quālitās state, nature, from
quālis of what sort