Similar words: score, scorn, scorch, core, scorner, scorpio, discord, scorpion. Meaning: [skɔr /skɔː] n. a large number or amount.
Random good picture Not show
61. The groups had historic scores to settle with each other.
62. The scores remained more or less even throughout the competition.
63. Our team tallied 4 scores when we played against them.
64. There was also a strong link between children'slow maths scores and parents' numeracy problems.
65. Campaigners lit scores of bonfires in ceremonies to mark the anniversary.
66. At the end of the service, scores of worshippers streamed down to the altar.
67. This was what they achieved after scores of years of ceaseless labour.
68. She had shut out two of her first four Wimbledon opponents by identical 6-0, 6-0 scores.
69. There was a good spread of scores on the test.
70. Sometimes, conductors have to commit complete scores to memory.
71. Schools anticipate an increase in student test scores.
72. Coaching may raise some students' SAT scores.
73. Thereafter, however, the fibre scores remained relatively constant.
74. Thus, the speakers represented by tables 6.2 and 6.3 were assigned range scores of 5 and 0 respectively.
75. Among the scores of witnesses called to testify was convicted drug smuggler George Morales.
76. The difference between self-penned autobiography and biography is that often, the biography scores for comprehensiveness.
77. Individually and in groups(sentencedict.com), residents have taken their complaints to scores of government officials.
78. Her career as a historian began when her father taught the 6-year-old to keep box scores of each Dodgers game.
79. Individual scores were then aggregated to derive shift, department, division, and plant totals.
80. With the scores level, Akram then had Mallender caught at slip via a rebound and bowled Tufnell next ball.
81. One possible cause for increased symptom scores in the core group was that they were all involved in seeking compensation.
82. Meanwhile scores of rebel sup porters appeared in court as prosecutors pressed the first charges stemming from the coup attempt.
83. They also measure the difference between the scores for the successive decades to capture the change in political representation.
84. From this a distribution of the word scores assigned to the target words was derived.
85. She brought the crowd to its feet after both her floor exercise and her vault, drawing team-high scores in both.
86. Students often have a good idea of what scores they need on college-entrance exams to earn acceptance letters and scholarships.
87. As we reported earlier, scores on these surveys had reached an all-time low.
88. Bailey and Harrison found that for certain types of passage cloze scores were potentially unreliable indicators of comprehension.
89. We also multiplied average scores by ten to eliminate decimal points,[sentence dictionary] and turn them into percentages.
90. Britten was particularly revered for his vocal scores for children, which captured their imagination and interest without condescension.
More similar words: score, scorn, scorch, core, scorner, scorpio, discord, scorpion, scornful, encore, scorching, scornfully, discordant, discordance, corporeal, habeas corpus, incorporeal, fresco, mores, foresee, forest, forestry, an apple of discord, restore, forestall, writ of habeas corpus, foresight, unforeseen, foreshadow, correspond.