Bar Italia inspired the song of the same name by the band Pulp, which features as the last track of their 1995 album Different Class.
Gym Class Heroes | class action | class | Class A | working class | DB Class 218 | Class War | British Rail Class 37 | Social class | British Rail Class 47 | Victorian Railways X class | GWR 3031 Class | Class D | British Rail Class 66 | World Class Championship Wrestling | Saved by the Bell: The New Class | Nimitz-class aircraft carrier | Middle Class Rut | Middle class | middle class | Mercedes-Benz G-Class | Master Class | master class | LNER Class A4 4468 Mallard | First class travel | Class Act | Class 66 | British Rail Class 52 | British Rail Class 222 | British Rail Class 20 |
Taken from the number-one album Different Class, it was released as a double A-sided single with "Sorted for E's & Wizz" in September 1995, and reached number two in the UK charts.
On the other hand, when low-frequency electric fields are generated by external sources instead of the fish itself, a different class of electroreceptor organs is used for this passive electrolocation, called ampullary organs.
The remaining sixth class is then either filled by the IB Exploratory Wheel, for IB students, which will offer the student a different class every nine weeks for that period (which are Spanish, Video Production, Physical Education, and Technology).
By contrast, when Bertrand Russell writes, in The Principles of Mathematics, "A class ... is neither a predicate nor a class-concept, for different predicates and different class-concepts may correspond to the same class." Russell uses the word class in a sense that might or might not correspond neatly to any identifiable ordinary English use of the word; so we might say that he is not using ordinary language, but jargon.
Terence Reese wrote "That the Culbertsons did not win more easily...was due to the fact that Jacoby was a player of quite different class from any of the others".
Richard D. North writing on his personal website said, "Most of the books on global warming science and policy are pretty muddled, hysterical or dreamy by turns. Very few have real quality. Mike Hulme’s book, Why We Disagree About Climate Change seems to be in a different class".