Betekenis van:
world-class

world-class
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
  • zich vooraan bevindend
  • ranking above all others

Synoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. He's a world-class scientist.
  2. In Judo, we have many world-class judokas.
  3. One must practice every day in order to become a world-class athlete.
  4. The notion of upper-class and lower-class among humans in this world is a topic likely to be found in a woman's essay. Anyone who thinks that falls in the lower-class category of humans.
  5. The world is divided into people who do things and people who get the credit. Try, if you can, to belong to the first class. There’s far less competition.
  6. This programme will promote world class ‘frontier research’.
  7. World-class research infrastructures need huge and long-term investments in resources (human and financial).
  8. seek to become a world class body for excellence in higher education, research and innovation;
  9. Service that provides access to a directory of instances of a class or classes of real-world phenomena containing some information regarding position.
  10. To this end, university-based research should be modernised, world-class infrastructures developed and made accessible, attractive careers and the mobility of researchers and students promoted.
  11. promote the EIT globally, so as to raise its attractiveness and make it a world-class body for excellence in higher education, research and innovation;
  12. The Communication ‘Towards world-class clusters in the European Union: Implementing the broad-based innovation strategy’ [2] adopted on 17.10.2008 foresees the establishment of a European Cluster Policy Group to help Member States to develop a more strategic vision to reach critical mass and world-class excellence.
  13. In the Communication from the Commission ‘Towards world-class clusters in the European Union: Implementing the broad-based innovation strategy’ [3], the establishment of a European Cluster Policy Group is identified as an important step of the policy agenda in support of world-class clusters in the EU.
  14. The scope and objective of the European Cluster Policy Group is to share intelligence about cluster policies in view to further explore how to better assist Member States in supporting the emergence of world-class clusters in the EU.
  15. World-class research infrastructures need huge and long-term investments in resources (human and financial). They should be used and exploited by an as large as possible community of scientist and customer industries on a European scale.