education: a title conferred on students by a college, university, or professional school on completion of a program of study
earned her four-year degree
associate's degrees
has a degree in psychology
b
: a grade of membership attained in a ritualistic order or society
received his first degree in the Knights of Columbus
c
: an academic title conferred to honor distinguished achievement or service
The actor was presented with an honorary degree.
d
: the formal ceremonies observed in the conferral of such a distinction
8
mathematics: a unit of measure for angles equal to an angle with its vertex at the center of a circle and its sides cutting off 1/360 of the circumference
a fifteen degree angle
47 degrees Latitude
also: a unit of measure for arcs of a circle equal to the amount of arc that subtends a central angle of one degree
9
archaic: a position or space on the earth or in the heavens as measured by degrees of latitude
10
music
a
: a step, note, or tone of a scale
b
: a line or space of the musical staff
11
: one of the divisions or intervals marked on a scale of a measuring instrument
specifically: any of various units for measuring temperature
350 degrees Fahrenheit
12
mathematics
a
: the sum of the exponents of the variables in the term of highest degree in a polynomial, polynomial function, or polynomial equation
: the greatest power of the derivative of highest order in a differential equation after the equation has been rationalized (see rationalizesense 2) and cleared of fractions with respect to the derivative
There are 360 degrees in a circle.
These trees will thrive, to a greater or lesser degree, in a number of climates.
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At the end of the day, our job is to graduate players from college, get their degree and change their lives.—Chantz Martin, FOXNews.com, 27 Dec. 2025 School districts do have the option to ask their community to raise taxes through referendums, but those have varying degrees of success depending on where students live.—Caroline Beck, IndyStar, 26 Dec. 2025 These are all realities that are deeply concerning and too common in Milwaukee, and, to a lesser degree, in many other communities.—Alan J. Borsuk, jsonline.com, 26 Dec. 2025 Stop Sales also crashed down on sausage and home fries that were left on the grill to cool down from 135 degrees to 70 degrees within two hours.—David J. Neal, Miami Herald, 26 Dec. 2025 See All Example Sentences for degree
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Anglo-French degré, from Vulgar Latin *degradus, from Latin de- + gradus — see degrade
: the intensity of something as measured by degrees
murder in the first degree
b
: one of the forms used in the comparison of an adjective or adverb
3
: a rank or grade of official or social position
persons of high degree
4
a
: a grade of membership in an order or society
b
: a title given a student by a college, university, or professional school upon completion of a program of study
a degree of doctor of medicine
c
: an academic title granted to honor a person who is not a student
5
: one of the divisions marked on a measuring instrument (as a device for measuring temperature)
6
: a unit of measure for angles and arcs that for angles is equal to an angle with its vertex at the center of a circle and its sides cutting off ¹⁄₃₆₀ of the circumference and that for an arc of a circle is equal to ¹⁄₃₆₀ of the circumference
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