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Definition of To no degree
1. Adverb. In no manner. "They are nowise different"
Lexicographical Neighbors of To No Degree
Literary usage of To no degree
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Panoplist, and Missionary Magazine United (1813)
"That they might be men feeling no degree of prejudice and subjected to no degree
of improper influence in the case, they were selected from churches ..."
2. Phi Delta Kappan by Phi Delta Kappa (1912)
"... in the essentials of religion open to all students, and that this curriculum,
leading to no degree, can be reasonably expanded in the near future. ..."
3. The Christian Examiner (1838)
"Such assumptions have been confined to no period of civilization, to no degree
of intellectual advancement, to neither sex. To decide upon their claims is ..."
4. The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe: With a Life of the Martyrologist, and by John Foxe, George Townsend (1843)
"lint whosoever shall be noised or proved to be of this wickedness, if he be of
a religious order, he shall from thenceforth be promoted to no degree of ..."
5. The Christian Examiner and General Review edited by Francis Jenks, James Walker, Francis William Pitt Greenwood, William Ware (1838)
"Such assumptions have been confined to no period of civilization, to no degree
of intellectual advancement, to neither sex. To decide upon their claims is ..."
6. Water Rights in the Western States: The Law of Prior Appropriation of Water by Samuel Charles Wiel (1911)
"... a deterioration which must be submitted to in favor of other riparian use to
a reasonable degree, but to no degree at all in favor of ..."