Type of Master's degree in the fields of humanities and social sciences.
Title or rank after six or seven years' seniority as a member of the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge and Dublin.
Scottish academic degree.
A master's degree in arts and sciences.
1He was educated at Louvain, where he graduated as master of arts.
2The master of arts was analogous to the master craftsman of a guild.
3He is a fellow of Pembroke College, and master of arts.
4The master of arts saw, and said no more.
5I am a master of arts, a doctor of philosophy, and I am no good.
6Sir, I am fifty-one years old, a master of arts and a doctor of divinity.
7The statutes of the place required, that the person chosen should be a master of arts.
8Thus, at seventeen he was already master of arts, and at twenty-one was appointed professor at Wittenberg.
9He proceeded to take his degree of master of arts, July 8, 1696.
10He was incorporated master of arts in the university of Oxford, having before taken the same degree at Cambridge 1610.
11He was a university man, a master of arts of the University of Erfurt; afterwards he joined a Dominican monastery.
12Take a master of arts, and confer with him: why does he not make us sensible of this artificial excellence?
13The master of arts was thinking rapidly, now, shaping a skillful flank movement on the bed where his Smith & Wesson lay.
14In a few years after, the university gave him the degree of master of arts, and he became a fellow of Pembroke Hall.
15On the 3d of July 1669, Mr. Sprat took his master of arts degree, and the same day, commenced doctor in divinity.
16In 1624 he received his degree of Master of Arts from Oxford.
Translations for master of arts