Universe

ahd-5
  • noun. All space-time, matter, and energy, including the solar system, all stars and galaxies, and the contents of intergalactic space, regarded as a whole.
  • noun. A hypothetical whole of space-time, matter, and energy that is purported to exist simultaneously with but to be different from this universe.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A model or conception of the earth and everything else that exists.
  • noun. The human race or a subset of it.
  • noun. A sphere of interest, activity, or understanding.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. undefined
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. The totality of existing things; all that is in dynamical connection with general experience taken collectively—embracing the Creator and creation; or psychical and material objects, but excluding the Creator; or material objects only.
  • noun. The whole world; all mankind; all that meets us in experience, in a loose sense.
  • noun. In logic, the collection of all the objects to which any discourse refers: as, the universe of things.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • noun. All created things viewed as constituting one system or whole; the whole body of things, or of phenomena; the to~ pa^n of the Greeks, the mundus of the Latins; the world; creation.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. The sum of everything that exists in the cosmos, including time and space itself; same as the Universe.
  • noun. An entity similar to our Universe; one component of a larger entity known as the multiverse.
  • noun. Everything under consideration.
  • noun. An imaginary collection of worlds.
  • noun. Intense form of world in the sense of perspective or social setting.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • noun. everything that exists anywhere
  • noun. (statistics) the entire aggregation of items from which samples can be drawn
  • noun. everything stated or assumed in a given discussion
  • Word Usage
    "Thus if the spherical-surface beings are living on a planet of which the solar system occupies only a negligibly small part of the spherical universe, they have no means of determining whether they are living in a finite or in an infinite universe, because the “piece of universe” to which they have access is in both cases practically plane, or Euclidean."
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