| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
| a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc. |
degree (dɪˈɡriː) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a stage in a scale of relative amount or intensity: a high degree of competence |
| 2. | an academic award conferred by a university or college on successful completion of a course or as an honorary distinction (honorary degree) |
| 3. | See burn any of three categories of seriousness of a burn |
| 4. | (in the US) any of the categories into which a crime is divided according to its seriousness: first-degree murder |
| 5. | genealogy a step in a line of descent, used as a measure of the closeness of a blood relationship |
| 6. | grammar any of the forms of an adjective used to indicate relative amount or intensity: in English they are positive, comparative, and superlative |
| 7. | music any note of a diatonic scale relative to the other notes in that scale: D is the second degree of the scale of C major |
| 8. | Celsius scale See also Fahrenheit scale ° a unit of temperature on a specified scale: the normal body temperature of man is 36.8 degrees Celsius |
| 9. | minute See also second Compare radian ° a measure of angle equal to one three-hundred-and-sixtieth of the angle traced by one complete revolution of a line about one of its ends |
| 10. | ° |
| a. a unit of latitude or longitude, divided into 60 minutes, used to define points on the earth's surface or on the celestial sphere | |
| b. a point or line defined by units of latitude and/or longitude | |
| 11. | ° a unit on any of several scales of measurement, as for alcohol content or specific gravity |
| 12. | maths |
| a. the highest power or the sum of the powers of any term in a polynomial or by itself: x4 + x + 3 and xyz² are of the fourth degree | |
| b. the greatest power of the highest order derivative in a differential equation | |
| 13. | obsolete a step; rung |
| 14. | archaic a stage in social status or rank |
| 15. | by degrees little by little; gradually |
| 16. | to a degree somewhat; rather |
| 17. | degrees of frost See frost |
| [C13: from Old French degre, from Latin | |
| de'greeless | |
| —adj | |
degree de·gree (dĭ-grē')
n.
Abbr. deg, deg. A unit of measure on a temperature scale.
A division of a circle, equal to 1/360 of its circumference.
A position or rank within a graded series.
degree (dĭ-grē') Pronunciation Key
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In geometry, a unit of measurement of angles, 1/360 of a circle. In physics, a unit of temperature (see Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin scale). A degree on the Fahrenheit scale is smaller than a degree on the Celsius or Kelvin scale. Degrees on the Celsius and Kelvin scales are the same size.