Dictionary entry

Category

Webster's Dictionary 1913

Cat″e‐go‐ry (?), n.; pl.Categories (#). [L. categoria, Gr. �, fr. � to accuse, affirm, predicate; � down, against + � to harrangue, assert, fr. � assembly.] 1. (Logic.) One of the highest classes to which the objects of knowledge or thought can be reduced, and by which they can be arranged in a system; an ultimate or undecomposable conception; a predicament.

The categories or predicaments — the former a Greek word, the latter its literal translation in the Latin language — were intended by Aristotle and his followers as an enumeration of all things capable of being named; an enumeration by the summa genera i.e., the most extensive classes into which things could be distributed.

J. S. Mill.

2. Class; also, state, condition, or predicament; as, we are both in the same category.

There is in modern literature a whole class of writers standing within the same category.

De Quincey.