Degree

Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

·noun A step, stair, or staircase.

II. Degree ·noun A line or space of the staff.

III. Degree ·noun Measure of advancement; quality; extent; as, tastes differ in kind as well as in degree.

IV. Degree ·noun Three figures taken together in numeration; thus, 140 is one degree, 222,140 two degrees.

V. Degree ·noun A division, space, or interval, marked on a mathematical or other instrument, as on a thermometer.

VI. Degree ·noun The point or step of progression to which a person has arrived; rank or station in life; position.

VII. Degree ·noun Grade or rank to which scholars are admitted by a college or university, in recognition of their attainments; as, the degree of bachelor of arts, master, doctor, ·etc.

VIII. Degree ·noun A certain distance or remove in the line of descent, determining the proximity of blood; one remove in the chain of relationship; as, a relation in the third or fourth degree.

IX. Degree ·noun A 360th part of the circumference of a circle, which part is taken as the principal unit of measure for arcs and angles. The degree is divided into 60 minutes and the minute into 60 seconds.

X. Degree ·noun One of a series of progressive steps upward or downward, in quality, rank, acquirement, and the like; a stage in progression; grade; gradation; as, degrees of vice and virtue; to advance by slow degrees; degree of comparison.

XI. Degree ·noun State as indicated by sum of exponents; more particularly, the degree of a term is indicated by the sum of the exponents of its literal factors; thus, a2b3c is a term of the sixth degree. The degree of a power, or radical, is denoted by its index, that of an equation by the greatest sum of the exponents of the unknown quantities in any term; thus, ax4 + bx2 = c, and mx2y2 + nyx = p, are both equations of the fourth degree.

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