degree / dɪˈgri /

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degree 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. any of a series of steps or stages, as in a process or course of action; a point in any scale.
  2. a stage or point in or as if in progression or retrogression: We followed the degrees of her recovery with joy.
  3. a stage in a scale of intensity or amount: a high degree of mastery.
  4. extent, measure, scope, or the like: To what degree will he cooperate?
  5. a stage in a scale of rank or station; relative standing in society, business, etc.: His uncouth behavior showed him to be a man of low degree.
  6. Education. an academic title conferred by universities and colleges as an indication of the completion of a course of study, or as an honorary recognition of achievement.
  7. a unit of measure, as of temperature or pressure, marked off on the scale of a measuring instrument: This thermometer shows a scale of degrees between only 20° and 40° C.
  8. Geometry. the 360th part of a complete angle or turn, often represented by the sign°, as in 45°, which is read as 45 degrees.Compare angle.
  9. the distinctive classification of a crime according to its gravity: murder in the first degree.
  10. Grammar. one of the parallel formations of adjectives and adverbs used to express differences in quality, quantity, or intensity. In English, low and careful are the positive degree, lower and more careful are the comparative degree, lowest and most careful are the superlative degree.
  11. Mathematics. the sum of the exponents of the variables in an algebraic term: x3 and 2x2y are terms of degree three.the term of highest degree of a given equation or polynomial: The expression 3x2y + y2+ 1 is of degree three.the exponent of the derivative of highest order appearing in a given differential equation.
  12. Music. a tone or step of the scale.
  13. Astrology. any of the 360 equal divisions of the ecliptic measured counterclockwise from the vernal equinox. Each of the 12 signs of the zodiac contains 30 degrees.
  14. a certain distance or remove in the line of descent, determining the proximity of relationship: a cousin of the second degree.
  15. Archaic. a line or point on the earth or the celestial sphere, as defined by degrees of latitude.
  16. Obsolete. a step, as of a stair.

degree 近义词

n. 名词 noun

unit of measurement

n. 名词 noun

recognition of achievement; rank or grade of position

更多degree例句

  1. So this was seen as perhaps the first known use of this degree to enact a large data grab.
  2. While it’s unclear how exactly Opendoor is now faring financially, shares of competitors Redfin and Zillow—which have also jumped into the iBuying market, though to a lesser degree—have breached all-time highs.
  3. Crop yields, though, will drop sharply with every degree of warming.
  4. After his two years in the Peace Corps, Hastings went back to school — this time to Stanford for a graduate degree in computer science.
  5. ByteDance is in the mix, along with Microsoft, Walmart and other companies to a lesser degree, like Oracle.
  6. “He turned pale, trembled to a great degree, was much agitated, and began to cry,” she told the court.
  7. Investigators will focus on whether the sudden emergency was so extreme that no degree of pilot skill would have helped.
  8. Dean Todd remained my friend until I graduated in 1988, with my degree in English literature.
  9. “I brought it with no small degree of trepidation,” Kucinich recalled in a lengthy phone conversation with the Daily Beast.
  10. I am not one of those people who believe that anyone with a college degree is by definition smarter than those without one.
  11. It is only just to say, that the officers exhibited a degree of courage far beyond any thing we had expected from them.
  12. He asked what time was usually spent in determining between right and wrong, and what degree of expense?
  13. He was a bookbinder previous to going upon the stage; and acquired a high degree of reputation as an actor.
  14. His Indian repute had not preceded him to such degree as to make the way easy for him through the London crowd.
  15. This is often of great advantage, as the strength of repose is expressed to a great degree in restraint of movement.