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caste (n.)

"one of the hereditary social groups of India," 1610s from Portuguese casta "breed, race, caste," earlier casta raça, "unmixed race," from Latin castus "cut off, separated" (also "pure," via notion of "cut off" from faults), past participle of carere "to be cut off from," from PIE *kas-to-, from root *kes- "to cut." Caste system is first recorded 1840. An earlier, now-obsolete sense of caste in English is "a race of men" (1550s), from Latin castus "chaste."

Of the castes, the first three are the natural and gradually established divisions of the Aryan invaders and conquerors of India; the fourth was made up of the subjugated aborigines. The Sanskrit name for caste is varna, color, the different castes having been at first marked by differences of complexion, according to race, and in some degree according to occupation and consequent exposure. [Century Dictionary, 1895]

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Definitions of caste from WordNet

caste (n.)
social status or position conferred by a system based on class;
lose caste by doing work beneath one's station
caste (n.)
(Hinduism) a hereditary social class among Hindus; stratified according to ritual purity;
caste (n.)
a social class separated from others by distinctions of hereditary rank or profession or wealth;
caste (n.)
in some social insects (such as ants) a physically distinct individual or group of individuals specialized to perform certain functions in the colony;
From wordnet.princeton.edu