degree

degree
noun
1) (Math., Phys.) Grad, der

an angle/a temperature of 45 degrees — ein Winkel/eine Temperatur von 45 Grad

2) (stage in scale or extent) Grad, der

by degrees — allmählich

a certain degree of imagination — ein gewisses Maß an Fantasie

to some or a certain degree — [bis] zu einem gewissen Grad

3) (academic rank) [akademischer] Grad

take/receive a degree in something — einen akademischen Grad in etwas (Dat.) erwerben/verliehen bekommen

have a degree in physics/maths — einen Hochschulabschluss in Physik/Mathematik haben

* * *
[di'ɡri:]
noun
1) ((an) amount or extent: There is still a degree of uncertainty; The degree of skill varies considerably from person to person.) der Grad
2) (a unit of temperature: 20° (= 20 degrees) Celsius.) das Grad
3) (a unit by which angles are measured: at an angle of 90° (= 90 degrees).) der Grad
4) (a title or certificate given by a university etc: He took a degree in chemistry.) die Würde, der Grad
- by degrees
- to a degree
* * *
de·gree
[dɪˈgri:]
n
1. (amount) Maß nt; (extent) Grad m
\degree of probability Wahrscheinlichkeitsgrad m
\degree of utilization Ausnutzungsgrad m
to different \degrees in unterschiedlichem Maße, unterschiedlich stark
a high \degree of skill ein hohes Maß an Können
to the last \degree im höchsten Grad
by \degrees nach und nach
to some \degree bis zu einem gewissen Grad
2. MATH, METEO Grad m
3. UNIV (rank or title) Abschluss m
to do a \degree in sth etw studieren
to have a \degree in sth einen Abschluss in etw haben
to have a master's \degree in sth esp AM, AUS einen Magister[titel] in etw haben
4. LAW
prohibited \degrees verbotene Verwandtschaftsgrade
* * *
[dɪ'griː]
n
1) (= unit of measurement) Grad m no pl

an angle of 90 degrees — ein Winkel m von 90 Grad

it was 35 degrees in the shade — es waren 35 Grad im Schatten

2) (= extent of risk, uncertainty etc) Maß nt

some or a certain degree of — ein gewisses Maß an (+dat)

to some degree, to a (certain) degree — einigermaßen, zu einem gewissen Grad, in gewissem Maße

to a high degree — in hohem Maße

to such a degree that ... — so sehr or in solchem Maße, dass ...

to what degree was he involved? — wie weit or in welchem Maße war er verwickelt?

3) (= step in scale) Grad m

by degrees — nach und nach

first degree murder (Jur) — Mord m

second degree murder (Jur) — Totschlag m

4) (UNIV) akademischer Grad

first degree — erster akademischer Grad

to get one's degree — seinen akademischen Grad erhalten

to do a degree — studieren

when did you do your degree? — wann haben Sie das Examen gemacht?

I'm taking or doing a language degree or a degree in languages — ich studiere Sprachwissenschaften

I've got a degree in Business Studies — ich habe einen Hochschulabschluss in Wirtschaftslehre

5) (= position in society) Rang m, Stand m
* * *
degree [dıˈɡriː] s
1. Grad m, Stufe f, Schritt m:
degree of priority Dringlichkeitsgrad, -stufe;
by degrees stufenweise, allmählich, nach und nach;
by many degrees bei Weitem;
by slow degrees ganz allmählich; murder A
2. (Verwandtschafts-)Grad m:
forbidden (oder prohibited) degree (für eine Heirat) verbotener Verwandtschaftsgrad
3. Rang m, Stufe f, (gesellschaftlicher) Stand:
of high degree von hohem Rang;
military degree of rank militärische Rangstufe
4. Grad m, Ausmaß n:
degree of hardness TECH Härtegrad;
degree of probability (besonders Statistik) Wahrscheinlichkeitsgrad;
degree of saturation CHEM Sättigungsgrad
5. fig Grad m, (Aus)Maß n:
to a degree
a) in hohem Maße, sehr,
b) einigermaßen, in gewissem Grade;
to some (oder a certain) degree ziemlich, bis zu einem gewissen Grade;
to a high degree in hohem Maße;
in the highest degree, to the last degree in höchstem Grade, aufs Höchste;
to what degree can he be trusted? wie weit kann man ihm trauen?;
not in the slightest degree nicht im Geringsten;
in no degree keineswegs;
in no small degree in nicht geringem Grade
6. ASTRON, GEOG, MATH, PHYS Grad m:
an angle of ninety degrees ein Winkel von 90 Grad;
an equation of the third degree eine Gleichung dritten Grades;
ten degrees Fahrenheit 10 Grad Fahrenheit;
degree of latitude Breitengrad;
degree of longitude Längengrad;
a 360-degree view ein Rundblick (of auf akk)
7. Gehalt m (of an dat):
of high degree hochgradig
8. (akademischer) Grad, Würde f, weitS. Hochschulabschluss m:
the degree of doctor der Doktorgrad, die Doktorwürde;
take one’s degree einen akademischen Grad erwerben, promovieren;
degree day Promotionstag m
9. auch degree of comparison LING Steigerungsstufe f
10. MUS Tonstufe f, Intervall n
11. obs Stufe f (einer Treppe etc):
song of degrees BIBEL Graduale n, Stufenpsalm m
deg. abk degree
* * *
noun
1) (Math., Phys.) Grad, der

an angle/a temperature of 45 degrees — ein Winkel/eine Temperatur von 45 Grad

2) (stage in scale or extent) Grad, der

by degrees — allmählich

a certain degree of imagination — ein gewisses Maß an Fantasie

to some or a certain degree — [bis] zu einem gewissen Grad

3) (academic rank) [akademischer] Grad

take/receive a degree in something — einen akademischen Grad in etwas (Dat.) erwerben/verliehen bekommen

have a degree in physics/maths — einen Hochschulabschluss in Physik/Mathematik haben

* * *
n.
Grad -e m.
Maß -e n.
Rang ¨-e m.
Stufe -n f.

English-german dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Schlagen Sie auch in anderen Wörterbüchern nach:

  • Degree — may refer to: Contents 1 As a unit of measurement 2 In mathematics 3 In education …   Wikipedia

  • Degree — De*gree , n. [F. degr[ e], OF. degret, fr. LL. degradare. See {Degrade}.] 1. A step, stair, or staircase. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] By ladders, or else by degree. Rom. of R. [1913 Webster] 2. One of a series of progressive steps upward or downward,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • degree — de·gree n 1: a step in a direct line of descent or in the line of ascent to a common ancestor 2 a: a measure of the seriousness of a crime see also fifth degree, first degree, f …   Law dictionary

  • degree — [di grē′] n. [ME degre < OFr degré, degree, step, rank < VL * degradus < degradare: see DEGRADE] 1. any of the successive steps or stages in a process or series 2. a step in the direct line of descent [a cousin in the second degree] 3.… …   English World dictionary

  • degree — In Sheridan s The Rivals (1775), we find the assertion Assuredly, sir, your father is wrath to a degree, meaning ‘your father is extremely cross’. The use survived in more florid English into the 20c and was accepted by Fowler (1926) ‘however… …   Modern English usage

  • degree — early 13c., from O.Fr. degré (12c.) a step (of a stair), pace, degree (of relationship), academic degree; rank, status, position, said to be from V.L. *degradus a step, from L.L. degredare, from L. de down (see DE (Cf. de )) + gradus step (see… …   Etymology dictionary

  • degree — ► NOUN 1) the amount, level, or extent to which something happens or is present. 2) a unit of measurement of angles, equivalent to one ninetieth of a right angle. 3) a unit in a scale of temperature, intensity, hardness, etc. 4) an academic rank… …   English terms dictionary

  • dégréé — dégréé, ée (dé gré é, ée) part. passé. Un vaisseau dégréé …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • degree — of freedom degree of polymerization …   Mechanics glossary

  • degree — [n1] unit of measurement amount, amplitude, caliber, dimension, division, expanse, extent, gauge, gradation, grade, height, intensity, interval, length, limit, line, link, mark, notch, period, plane, point, proportion, quality, quantity, range,… …   New thesaurus

  • degree — noun 1 measurement of angles VERB + DEGREE ▪ rotate, spin, turn ▪ I turned the wheel 90 degrees, PREPOSITION ▪ through … degrees ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”