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Sort   /sɔrt/   Listen
noun
Sort  n.  Chance; lot; destiny. (Obs.) "By aventure, or sort, or cas (chance)." "Let blockish Ajax draw The sort to fight with Hector."



Sort  n.  
1.
A kind or species; any number or collection of individual persons or things characterized by the same or like qualities; a class or order; as, a sort of men; a sort of horses; a sort of trees; a sort of poems.
2.
Manner; form of being or acting. "Which for my part I covet to perform, In sort as through the world I did proclaim." "Flowers, in such sort worn, can neither be smelt nor seen well by those that wear them." "I'll deceive you in another sort." "To Adam in what sort Shall I appear?" "I shall not be wholly without praise, if in some sort I have copied his style."
3.
Condition above the vulgar; rank. (Obs.)
4.
A chance group; a company of persons who happen to be together; a troop; also, an assemblage of animals. (Obs.) "A sort of shepherds." "A sort of steers." "A sort of doves." "A sort of rogues." "A boy, a child, and we a sort of us, Vowed against his voyage."
5.
A pair; a set; a suit.
6.
pl. (Print.) Letters, figures, points, marks, spaces, or quadrats, belonging to a case, separately considered.
Out of sorts (Print.), with some letters or sorts of type deficient or exhausted in the case or font; hence, colloquially, out of order; ill; vexed; disturbed.
To run upon sorts (Print.), to use or require a greater number of some particular letters, figures, or marks than the regular proportion, as, for example, in making an index.
Synonyms: Kind; species; rank; condition. Sort, Kind. Kind originally denoted things of the same family, or bound together by some natural affinity; and hence, a class. Sort signifies that which constitutes a particular lot of parcel, not implying necessarily the idea of affinity, but of mere assemblage. the two words are now used to a great extent interchangeably, though sort (perhaps from its original meaning of lot) sometimes carries with it a slight tone of disparagement or contempt, as when we say, that sort of people, that sort of language. "As when the total kind Of birds, in orderly array on wing, Came summoned over Eden to receive Their names of there." "None of noble sort Would so offend a virgin."



verb
Sort  v. t.  (past & past part. sorted; pres. part. sorting)  
1.
To separate, and place in distinct classes or divisions, as things having different qualities; as, to sort cloths according to their colors; to sort wool or thread according to its fineness. "Rays which differ in refrangibility may be parted and sorted from one another."
2.
To reduce to order from a confused state.
3.
To conjoin; to put together in distribution; to class. "Shellfish have been, by some of the ancients, compared and sorted with insects." "She sorts things present with things past."
4.
To choose from a number; to select; to cull. "That he may sort out a worthy spouse." "I'll sort some other time to visit you."
5.
To conform; to adapt; to accommodate. (R.) "I pray thee, sort thy heart to patience."



Sort  v. i.  
1.
To join or associate with others, esp. with others of the same kind or species; to agree. "Nor do metals only sort and herd with metals in the earth, and minerals with minerals." "The illiberality of parents towards children makes them base, and sort with any company."
2.
To suit; to fit; to be in accord; to harmonize. "They are happy whose natures sort with their vocations." "Things sort not to my will." "I can not tell you precisely how they sorted."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sort" Quotes from Famous Books



... nerves—Good things, not subtle—new, yet orthodox; As easy reading as the dog-eared page That's fingered by said public fifty years, Since first taught spelling by its grandmother, And yet a revelation in some sort: ...
— St. Elmo • Augusta J. Evans

... is congestion of the course of study, overpressure and distraction of pupils, and a narrow specialization fatal to the very idea of education. But these bad results usually lead to more of the same sort of thing as a remedy. When it is perceived that after all the requirements of a full life experience are not met, the deficiency is not laid to the isolation and narrowness of the teaching of the existing subjects, and this recognition made the basis of reorganization of ...
— Democracy and Education • John Dewey

... the illustrious Sivi as also the driver of his car, cut off from his trunk Sivi's head with head-gear on it. Then Duryodhana quickly sent unto Drona a driver for his car. The reins of his steeds having been taken up by the new man, Drona once more rushed against his foes. The sort of the ruler of the Kalingas, supported by the Kalinga troops, rushed against Bhimasena, filled with rage at the slaughter of his sire by the latter. Having pierced Bhima with five shafts he once more pierced him with seven. And he struck Visoka (the driver of Bhima's car) with three ...
— The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 2 • Kisari Mohan Ganguli

... some sort, therefore, the sunshine and light of landscape, so far as that light depends on the ground; but it is a source of another kind of sunshine, quite as important to us in the way we live at present—sunshine, not of landscape, ...
— The Two Paths • John Ruskin

... temperature of an igloo to clean, they would gather moisture, which had to be removed from every portion of the lock and working parts before again meeting the cold, or they would be worthless as weapons. They must also be kept free from oil or any kind of grease, as all lubricants of that sort will harden and prevent the working of the lock. It is but fair to state in this connection that our fire-arms, in which all the best American manufacturers were represented, worked admirably under these trying circumstances, and I feel justified in ...
— Schwatka's Search • William H. Gilder


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