rating
/ˈreɪtɪŋ/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈreɪtɪŋ/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈrā-tiŋ/ (ame, mw)
rating — noun
- ratingsingular
- ratingsplural
1. a number, grade, or set of stars that shows the quality, safety, or value of som
a number, grade, or set of stars that shows the quality, safety, or value of something — for example, a product, a service, or a person's creditworthiness — compared against a standard scale.
The school received a five-star rating from the national education inspectors.
rating from [source institution]
Heather's credit rating improved after she paid off her student loans.
credit rating (common financial collocation)
Ayana checked the safety rating of the second-hand car before buying it.
The hotel earned a top rating in the customer satisfaction survey this year.
Tomás compared the energy efficiency ratings of several different washing machines.
- score
focuses on a numerical result, often in tests or games; more specific than rating
- grade
usually implies a letter or category (A/B/C) rather than a number; common in academic contexts
- ranking
stresses position relative to others rather than absolute quality
- evaluation
refers to the process or the written report, not necessarily a single score
文法句型
rating of + number/grade
rating from + evaluator
用法筆記
Often used in compound nouns with a preceding noun that names the area being measured, such as credit rating, safety rating, or star rating. The rating itself is usually expressed as a number (1–10), a letter grade (A–F), or a star count (1–5).
常見錯誤
2. numbers collected by broadcasters that indicate the size of a programme's audien
numbers collected by broadcasters that indicate the size of a programme's audience, used as a measure of its popularity and as a basis for setting advertising rates.
The talk show's ratings have fallen since the new host took over.
ratings fall / rise (collocation with trend verbs)
Owen was thrilled when the podcast's ratings climbed past one million listeners.
The evening news consistently earns the highest ratings of any programme on that channel.
Salma checked the overnight ratings to see which show won its time slot.
The radio station's ratings dropped sharply after the morning host left.
- audience figures
more formal and precise; focuses on the actual viewer/listener count
- viewership
specifically for television; less common for radio
- listenership
specifically for radio content
文法句型
the ratings of + programme
ratings for + time slot
用法筆記
In this sense, the plural form ratings is far more common than the singular. Expressions such as the ratings, ratings are in, and ratings boost are typical in media-industry discussions.