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Master of Arts

NOUN
  1. a master's degree in arts and sciences

How To Use Master of Arts In A Sentence

  • Barbara had not only received this guest alone, but she had kept him more than an hour, and the servant could swear that the young man to whom she sang long songs -- which, it is true, sounded like church music -- to the lute and also to the harp, was Erasmus Eckhart, the adopted son of the archtraitor, Dr. Hiltner, who had just obtained the degree of Master of Arts in Wittenberg. Barbara Blomberg — Complete
  • It said in a statement Mr Mosia held a Master of Arts degree in international affairs from Sussex University and a diploma from ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Miss Sue Lawley, journalist and broadcaster. Master of Arts.
  • The Master of Arts (MA) degree in the department is a self-standing degree, but may also serve as preparation for the research degrees of MPhil and PhD.
  • The degree of Master of Arts, which, it has been observed, could not be obtained for him at an early period of his life, was now considered as an honour of considerable importance, in order to grace the title-page of his Dictionary; and his character in the literary world being by this time deservedly high, his friends thought that, if proper exertions were made, the University of The Life of Samuel Johnson LL.D.
  • Kate Edger was appointed to teach at Christchurch Girls' High School and at the same time studied for a Master of Arts degree from Canterbury College and was capped in 1882.
  • The Master of Arts in Global Communication Practice is an advanced course for video documentary production.
  • The conferring of the degree of Master of Arts, as a title invested with certain specific academic privileges, is closely connected in origin with the early history of the University of Paris, which was the mother-university in arts as Bologna was in law. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • My professor has a Master of Arts degree from Boston College and a PhD from the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London. Into the Wardrobe
  • Barbara had not only received this guest alone, but she had kept him more than an hour, and the servant could swear that the young man to whom she sang long songs -- which, it is true, sounded like church music -- to the lute and also to the harp, was Erasmus Eckhart, the adopted son of the archtraitor, Dr. Hiltner, who had just obtained the degree of Master of Arts in Complete Project Gutenberg Georg Ebers Works
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