classical

[ˈklæsɪk&+{ə}l]
adj
of, relating to, or characteristic of the ancient Greeks and Romans or their civilization, esp in the period of their ascendancy
designating, following, or influenced by the art or culture of ancient Greece or Rome
classical architecture
of, relating to, or denoting any music or its period of composition marked by stability of form, intellectualism, and restraint.See romantic .accepted as a standard.denoting serious art music in general.See pop
of or relating to a style of music composed, esp at Vienna, during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This period is marked by the establishment, esp by Haydn and Mozart, of sonata form
denoting or relating to a style in any of the arts characterized by emotional restraint and conservatismSee classicism
a classical style of painting
well versed in the art and literature of ancient Greece and Rome
(of an education) based on the humanities and the study of Latin and Greek
not involving the quantum theory or the theory of relativity.obeying the laws of Newtonian mechanics or 19th-century physics
another word for classicanother word for classic
(of a logical or mathematical system) according with the law of excluded middle, so that every statement is known to be either true or false even if it is not known which