Sentence for degree | Use degree in a sentence

Sentences for degree. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use degree in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for degree.

  • Chuse your own degree of crossness. (4)
  • Is she in any degree commonly well bred? (10)
  • I should think him a squire in his degree. (10)
  • Otherwise, he in no degree exonerated himself. (10)
  • Otherwise, he in no degree exonerated himself. (22)
  • A remarkable chap; representative to the last degree. (12)
  • That is to say, his fiction is to the last degree dramatic. (9)
  • The picture was intensely dramatic, but in no degree theatrical. (1)
  • The superlative Polar degree appeared to invigorate Mr. Barrett. (10)
  • Was I not bound in manly honour to be to some degree adventurous? (10)
  • Did I in no degree participate in the poignant savour of his scheme? (10)
  • I am in favour of some degree of military training for all gentlemen. (10)
  • He is unscrupulous, audacious, barefaced, and corrupt to the last degree. (16)
  • Clotilde at once reached the conclusion of her having it in an equal degree. (10)
  • The romantic of that day and the real of this are in certain degree the same. (9)
  • On the way home Cecilia had been compelled in some degree to defend Mr. Romfrey. (10)
  • To speak, she was sure would be to betray a most unreasonable degree of happiness. (4)
  • Probably few writers have in the same degree compelled the liking of their readers. (9)
  • Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree; the pen has been in their hands. (4)
  • If he was sweet and lovely to every one, how was he different to her except in degree? (9)
  • His wife had now realized the fact, at least in a degree that excluded trifling with it. (9)
  • I have been scolding him to such a degree, my dear Catherine, you would be quite amazed. (4)
  • The pace she maintained in no degree impeded the concentrated passion of her utterance. (10)
  • The pace she maintained in no degree impeded the concentrated passion of her utterance. (22)
  • Now, however, I see nothing in it but a very natural and consistent degree of discretion. (4)
  • Shelton found himself between Miss Casserol and a lady undressed to much the same degree. (8)
  • The conception of her husband as a champion seemed to commend him to her in novel degree. (9)
  • To Catherine and Lydia, neither the letter nor its writer were in any degree interesting. (4)
  • According to degree of exposure, their faces were bloated and black or yellow and shrunken. (7)
  • She had ceased to comprehend Mrs. Lawrence, even to the degree of thinking her unfeminine. (10)
  • Her aunt Bertram had recollected her on this occasion with an unusual degree of wakefulness. (4)
  • The monkey cage at nightfall is a sure register of the degree of generosity of a community. (21)
  • But I feel pretty certain that Mr. James has not been able to disinherit himself to this degree. (9)
  • Caseldy was convulsed with wrath, to such a degree as to make the part of an intermediary perilous. (10)
  • He was received with great honor, being granted the degree of Doctor of Music from Oxford University. (3)
  • Wonder in no degree that they indulge a craving to be fools, or that many of them act the character. (10)
  • I register my thanks to your grandfather Beltham; the same, in a minor degree, to Captain Jasper Welsh. (10)
  • It might be, to a certain degree, her quickness at catching the hue and shade of evanescent conversation. (10)
  • Expressionless to a degree, they at once convinced the spectator that she was a woman of the best breeding. (8)
  • Mr. Barmby, she thought, deserved her gratitude in some degree for stepping between Mr. Sowerby and Nesta. (10)
  • They had each had money, but their marriages had made a material difference in their degree of consequence. (4)
  • They would plead insanity of some kind and degree, and it would be almost impossible to establish their guilt. (7)
  • Yet if my friend is not the same to me, it is the end to that form of friendship: not to the degree possibly. (10)
  • Chillon expected the lowest of his countrymen to show some degree of chivalry upon occasions like the present. (10)
  • Not one man at that table, as he reflected, would consider the bond which held him in any serious degree binding. (10)
  • The valley was wonderfully fertile, was brought to a high degree of cultivation and supported an enormous population. (3)
  • Some degree of pain was necessary to Sir Willoughby, otherwise he would not have seen his generosity confronting him. (10)
  • The greatest degree of rational consistency could not have been more engaging, and they talked with mutual satisfaction. (4)
  • Sir Meeson Corby, important to himself in an eminent degree, enjoyed the novel sense of his importance with his fellows. (10)
  • It is in the last degree undesirable that any man of German origin should remain free to work possible harm to our country. (8)
  • The parting was as quiet and cheerful as, in the opposite degree, Vittoria had thought it would be melancholy and regretful. (10)
  • But she had an almost instant doubt of his caring for her as he had done, of his feeling the same tenderness in the same degree. (4)
  • I was calm for some time; but the greatest degree of forbearance may be overcome, and I hope I was afterwards sufficiently keen. (4)
  • But there never will be civilization where Comedy is not possible; and that comes of some degree of social equality of the sexes. (10)
  • Even the power of writing short stories, which we suppose ourselves to have in such excellent degree, has spread from New England. (9)
  • Having refused to see a doctor, or have his temperature taken, it was impossible to tell precisely what degree of fever he was in. (8)
  • She was also fatally anxious to be in the extreme degree conscientious, and corrected and modified her remarks most suspiciously. (10)
  • For he had in high degree the faculty, so essential to public life, of switching off his whole attention from one subject to another. (8)
  • Its attitude in the chair, its fallen jaw, glazed eyes and degree of decomposition are caricatured and exaggerated out of all reason. (7)
  • Enough that she thought proper to broach the matter, and cite her own Christian sentiments, now that she was indifferent in some degree. (10)
  • In their search they were obliged, as March complained, to the acquisition of useless information in a degree unequalled in their experience. (9)
  • So we need not marvel that his acquaintances should suppose him to be secretly aware of an extreme degree in which Lady Camper was a veteran. (10)
  • Isabella could not be aware of the pain she was inflicting; but it was a degree of wilful thoughtlessness which Catherine could not but resent. (4)
  • At the same time, there is no reason why they should not be respected, managed with some degree of regard for me and attention to consequences. (10)
  • He was a man endowed to excite it in the most effective manner, to a degree fearful enough to win English sympathies despite his un-English faults. (10)
  • Oh, what an answer to that letter of fervid respectfulness, of innocent supplication for maternal affection, for some degree of benignant friendship! (10)
  • Anxious and uneasy, the period which passed in the drawing-room, before the gentlemen came, was wearisome and dull to a degree that almost made her uncivil. (4)
  • With this statement Rosalie stopped and looked around her, frightened by her own frankness, which she now recognized as unwise and fatal to the last degree. (5)

Also see sentences for: capacity, extent, gauge, measure, size.

Glad you visited this page with a sentence for degree. Now that you’ve seen how to use degree in a sentence hope you might explore the rest of this educational reference site Sentencefor.com to see many other example sentences which provide word usage information.

Leave a Reply