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81 BA
[,bi:'ei:]( abbreviation) (Bachelor of Arts; a first university degree in arts, literature etc (but not in the exact sciences).) humanitāro zinātņu bakalaurs -
82 BFA
[,bi: ef 'ei]( abbreviation) (Bachelor of Fine Arts; first degree in Fine Arts.) mākslas bakalaurs -
83 BSc
[,bi: es 'si:, ]( American[),bi: ɡes](American B.S.) (abbreviation)(Bachelor of Science; a first university degree in a science subject.) eksakto zinātņu bakalaurs -
84 finals
noun plural (the last examinations for a university degree etc: I am sitting/taking my finals in June.) gala eksāmeni -
85 in so far as
(to the degree or extent that: I gave him the details insofar as I knew them.) cik vien -
86 infinitely
adverb (extremely; to a very great degree: The time at which our sun will finally cease to burn is infinitely far away.) bezgalīgi -
87 MBA
[,em bi: 'ei]( abbreviation) (Master of Business Administration; a second university degree in business management.) biznesa vadības maģistrs -
88 MSc
[,em es 'si:, ]( American[),em 'es](American MS) (abbreviation)(Master of Science; a second university degree in a science subject.) eksakto zinātņu maģistrs -
89 PhD
[,pi: ei 'di:]( abbreviation) (Doctor of Philosophy; an advanced university degree: She has a PhD in chemistry/history.) zinātņu doktora grāds -
90 post-graduate
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91 significantly
[siɡ'nifikəntli]1) (in a significant manner: He patted his pocket significantly.) svarīgi; zīmīgi2) (to an important degree: Sales-levels are significantly lower than last year, which is very disappointing.) ievērojami
См. также в других словарях:
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