An unincorporated community in Kentucky.
A village in Saskatchewan, Canada.
(military) Title for an army officer with the rank of major.
A rank of officer in the military, specifically in the army and us air force, between captain and lieutenant colonel, or an officer in charge of a section of band instruments.
A person of legal age.
A term used in music to refer to a major key, interval, scale, or a system of change-ringing using eight bells in campanology.
A large, commercially successful company, especially a record label that is bigger than an indie.
A principal subject or course of study pursued by a college or university student working towards a degree.
A term or premise that is omitted in logic.
(bridge) Ellipsis of major suit.
(Canadian football) A touchdown, or major score.
(Australian rules football) A goal.
(British slang, dated) An elder brother (especially at a public school).
(entomology) A large leaf-cutter ant that acts as a soldier, defending the nest.
(obsolete) Alternative form of mayor and mair.
(intransitive) Used in a phrasal verb: major in.
An adjective "major" represents something that is greater in importance, quantity, size, or risk, notable or significant in effect, and involving great risk or seriousness.
Of full legal age, having attained majority.
(education) Of or relating to a subject of academic study chosen as a field of specialization.
An adjective used in music to describe scales, intervals, keys, and bell changes that are based on a major scale and tend to produce a bright or joyful effect.
(UK, dated) Indicating the elder of two brothers, appended to a surname in public schools.
An adjective "major" in logic refers to a term occurring as the predicate in the conclusion of a categorical syllogism or a premise containing the major term in a categorical syllogism.