Key: "S:" = Show Synset (semantic) relations, "W:" = Show Word (lexical) relations
Display options for sense: (gloss) "an example sentence"
Noun
S: (n) community (a group of people living in a particular local area) "the team is drawn from all parts of the community"
S: (n) community (a group of people having a religion, ethnic, profession, or other particular characteristic in common) "he was well known throughout the Catholic community"; "the news spread rapidly through the medical community"; "they formed a community of scientists"
S: (n) people ((plural) any group of human beings (men or women or children) collectively) "old people"; "there were at least 200 people in the audience"
S: (n) community (a group of people having a religion, ethnic, profession, or other particular characteristic in common) "he was well known throughout the Catholic community"; "the news spread rapidly through the medical community"; "they formed a community of scientists"
S: (n) damned (people who are condemned to eternal punishment) "he felt he had visited the realm of the damned"
S: (n) dead (people who are no longer living) "they buried the dead"
S: (n) slain (people who have been slain (as in battle))
S: (n) living (people who are still living) "save your pity for the living"
S: (n) deaf (people who have severe hearing impairments) "many of the deaf use sign language"
S: (n) disabled, handicapped (people collectively who are crippled or otherwise physically handicapped) "technology to help the elderly and the disabled"
S: (n) the halt ((archaic) lame persons collectively) "the poor, and the maimed, and the halt, and the blind"--Luke 14:21
S: (n) doomed, lost (people who are destined to die soon) "the agony of the doomed was in his voice"
S: (n) enemy (any hostile group of people) "he viewed lawyers as the real enemy"
S: (n) folk, folks, common people (people in general (often used in the plural)) "they're just country folk"; "folks around here drink moonshine"; "the common people determine the group character and preserve its customs from one generation to the next"
S: (n) network army (a group of like-minded people united by the internet; a new kind of social or political of business group that may exert broad influence on a shared concern) "a network army of software programmers contribute free software to those who want it"
S: (n) nationality (people having common origins or traditions and often comprising a nation) "immigrants of the same nationality often seek each other out"; "such images define their sense of nationality"
S: (n) peanut gallery ((figurative) people whose criticisms are regarded as irrelevant or insignificant (resembling uneducated people who throw peanuts on the stage to express displeasure with a performance)) "he ignored complaints from the peanut gallery"
S: (n) pocket (a small isolated group of people) "they were concentrated in pockets inside the city"; "the battle was won except for cleaning up pockets of resistance"
S: (n) retreated (people who have retreated) "he had only contempt for the retreated"
S: (n) sick (people who are sick) "they devote their lives to caring for the sick"
S: (n) estate of the realm, estate, the three estates (a major social class or order of persons regarded collectively as part of the body politic of the country (especially in the United Kingdom) and formerly possessing distinct political rights)
S: (n) fourth estate (the press, including journalists, newspaper writers, photographers)
S: (n) labor, labour, working class, proletariat (a social class comprising those who do manual labor or work for wages) "there is a shortage of skilled labor in this field"
S: (n) yeomanry (class of small freeholders who cultivated their own land)
S: (n) caste (a social class separated from others by distinctions of hereditary rank or profession or wealth)
S: (n) caste ((Hinduism) a hereditary social class among Hindus; stratified according to ritual purity)
S: (n) jati ((Hinduism) a Hindu caste or distinctive social group of which there are thousands throughout India; a special characteristic is often the exclusive occupation of its male members (such as barber or potter))
S: (n) ninja (a class of 14th century Japanese who were trained in martial arts and were hired for espionage and assassinations)
S: (n) firing line (the most advanced and responsible group in an activity) "the firing line is where the action is"
S: (n) immigrant class (recent immigrants who are lumped together as a class by their low socioeconomic status in spite of different cultural backgrounds)
S: (n) center (politically moderate persons; centrists)
S: (n) craft, trade (people who perform a particular kind of skilled work) "he represented the craft of brewers"; "as they say in the trade"
S: (n) womanhood, woman, fair sex (women as a class) "it's an insult to American womanhood"; "woman is the glory of creation"; "the fair sex gathered on the veranda"
S: (n) nation, land, country (the people who live in a nation or country) "a statement that sums up the nation's mood"; "the news was announced to the nation"; "the whole country worshipped him"
S: (n) Dutch, Dutch people (the people of the Netherlands) "the Dutch are famous for their tulips"
S: (n) Frisian (a native or inhabitant of Friesland or Frisia)
S: (n) youth culture (young adults (a generational unit) considered as a cultural class or subculture)
S: (n) hip-hop (an urban youth culture associated with rap music and the fashions of African-American residents of the inner city)
S: (n) youth subculture (a minority youth culture whose distinctiveness depended largely on the social class and ethnic background of its members; often characterized by its adoption of a particular music genre)
S: (n) flower people, hippies, hipsters (a youth subculture (mostly from the middle class) originating in San Francisco in the 1960s; advocated universal love and peace and communes and long hair and soft drugs; favored acid rock and progressive rock music)
S: (n) Rastafari, Rastas ((Jamaica) a Black youth subculture and religious movement that arose in the ghettos of Kingston, Jamaica, in the 1950s; males grow hair in long dreadlocks and wear woolen caps; use marijuana and listen to reggae music)
S: (n) beat generation, beats, beatniks (a United States youth subculture of the 1950s; rejected possessions or regular work or traditional dress; for communal living and psychedelic drugs and anarchism; favored modern forms of jazz (e.g., bebop))
S: (n) teddy boys (a British youth subculture that first appeared in the 1950s; mainly from unskilled backgrounds, they adopted a pseudo-Edwardian dress code and rock'n'roll music; proletarian and xenophobic, they were involved in race riots in the United Kingdom)
S: (n) punks (a youth subculture closely associated with punk rock music in the late 1970s; in part a reaction to the hippy subculture; dress was optional but intended to shock (plastic garbage bags or old school uniforms) and hair was dyed in bright colors (in Mohican haircuts or sometimes spiked in bright plumes))
S: (n) rockers, bikers (originally a British youth subculture that evolved out of the teddy boys in the 1960s; wore black leather jackets and jeans and boots; had greased hair and rode motorcycles and listened to rock'n'roll; were largely unskilled manual laborers)
S: (n) skinheads, bootboys (a youth subculture that appeared first in England in the late 1960s as a working-class reaction to the hippies; hair was cropped close to the scalp; wore work-shirts and short jeans (supported by suspenders) and heavy red boots; involved in attacks against Asians and football hooliganism)
S: (n) mods (a youth subculture that began in London in the early 1960s; a working-class movement with highly stylized dress and short hair; listened to rhythm and blues music and travelled on motor scooters)
S: (n) Hebrews, Israelites (the ethnic group claiming descent from Abraham and Isaac (especially from Isaac's son Jacob); the nation whom God chose to receive his revelation and with whom God chose to make a covenant (Exodus 19))