Graduate
GRAD'UATE, verb transitive [Latin gradus, a degree.]
1. To honor with a degree or diploma, in a college or university; to confer a degree on; as, to graduate a master of arts.
2. To mark with degrees, regular intervals, or division; as, to graduate a thermometer.
3. To form shades or nice differences.
4. To raise to a higher place in the scale of metals.
5. To advance by degrees; to improve.
Dyers advance and graduate their colors with salts.
Diseases originating in the atmosphere act exclusively on bodies graduated to receive their impressions.
7. To mark degrees or differences of any kind; as, to graduate punishment.
8. In chemistry, to bring fluids to a certain degree of consistency.
GRAD'UATE, verb intransitive To receive a degree from a college or university.
1. To pass by degrees; to change gradually. Sandstone which graduates into gneiss, Carnelian sometimes graduates into quartz.
GRAD'UATE, noun One who has received a degree in a college or university, or from some professional incorporated society.