The plural of degree is degrees
rectangles and rhombii (plural of rhombus)
Plural
The plural of Shears is Shears
Ceilings is the plural of ceiling
The plural of radius is radii
The plural of degree is degrees.
The plural of "master's degree" is "master's degrees."
The acronym MA (Master of Arts degree) has the plural form MAs.
rectangles and rhombii (plural of rhombus)
Degrees is the plural of the noun form; degree is the singular noun form. The word degree can sometimes be used as an adjective such as 'degree program' or 'degree credits'.
The word sought may be "degrees" - plural of degree, a unit of temperature.
The plural form of the noun 'challenge' is challenges.Example: He overcame many challenges to earn his degree.
Since it's more than one degree, it's plural, therefore it would be "degrees". If it were one degree, then you would say "one degree Celsius".
The correct placement is after "master." The only time that you would use it after the 's' is if there were many masters (plural). An example would be "Bob achieved his Master's Degree with honors."
You write 'two degrees Celsius'. If you have more than one, "degrees" is plural.
Unlike the word goose, the form does not change - it has the regular plural mongooses.
When referring to an associate's degree in general, it is singular. However, if you are talking about degrees belonging to multiple named individuals, you would use the possessive form, as in "the students' associate's degrees."