Measure in sport of the difficulty of a skill, performance, or course.
1 But this is a question attended with no common degree of difficulty .
2 We've got households in some degree of difficulty already, he said.
3 That degree of difficulty is one of the principal attractions of the competition.
4 But degree of difficulty is no excuse for what they did to Dumbo.
5 It's an aggressive promise, given the degree of difficulty here.
6 On Afghanistan, and by extension Pakistan, he asked, what is the degree of difficulty ?
7 And Murdock's film has a relatively high degree of difficulty .
8 The degree of difficulty depends on how it's implemented, though.
9 You might be surprised at the degree of difficulty in identifying some of them!
10 Red assured her that on a course of this degree of difficulty , anything could happen.
11 The degree of difficulty has grown vastly more acute.
12 The degree of difficulty is significant and beating Spain may not be the hard part.
13 This fact contains some of the competition's great appeals: its degree of difficulty and its unpredictability.
14 We've got households in some degree of difficulty already, he told Four Corners earlier this week.
15 One can only imagine the degree of difficulty when it comes to a World Cup final.
16 A nine-on-seven overlap is rarely converted such is the degree of difficulty when facing organised defences.
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