Fellow Crafts were entitled to take a part in any discussion in which the lodge, while open in the first or second degree, might engage, but not to vote.
It is probable that, at an early period, when the great body of the craft consisted of Entered Apprentices, the usage permitted the burial of members, of the first or second degree, with the honors of Masonry.
A person may forget, from the lapse of time, and vouch for a stranger as a Master Mason, when the lodge in which he saw him was only opened in the first or second degree.
He is prominent in Masonic circles, having taken all the degrees of the York and Scottish Rites up to and including the thirty-second degree in the consistory, and he is now eminent commander of the Knights Templar commandery.
He is a thirty-second degree Mason, being identified with all the Masonic bodies of both the York and Scottish Rites.
He attained the thirty-second degree of the Scottish Rite in Masonry and held all of the chairs in the different Masonic branches with which he was affiliated.
Twenty-second Degree, Prince of Libanus, Knight of the Royal Axe, 340-u.
Thirty-second Degree, Master of the Royal Secret, Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret, 839.
In 1817 the Neptune got up to the north of Spitzbergen, as far as the eighty-second degree.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "second degree" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.