Similar words: score, scorn, scorch, core, scorner, scorpio, discord, scorpion. Meaning: [skɔr /skɔː] n. a large number or amount.
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121. They spend ever more on public education, yet test scores and dropout rates barely budge.
122. Finally I passed rows of sombre-looking huts, blackened by cooking smoke and infested by scores of small children and large dogs.
123. Thus, it was even more amazing that the final scores were so high.
124. He takes a quick kick dead straight towards goal ... which shearer runs on to and scores.
125. In this study we could not show correlation between pathological scores or their distribution and any clinical parameter.
126. Interestingly, there is a striking lack of relationship between Mach scores and demographic characteristics.
127. Intelligence Tests Schools use intelligence test scores to predict potential for academic success.
128. An organisation as big as the police has to turn to scores of different agencies.
129. From late December to April, scores of California charter boats search out migrating gray whales for tourists.
130. I was awarded seventeen points out of twenty but judging by the worried looks and furrowed brows there were some lower scores.
131. His leather briefcase contained scores and a baton, but no sun block.
132. The programme plots speakers in terms of their scores on two principal components, represented as axes of the graph.
133. All the scores for the trials which involved the same time delay were totalled up.
134. However, test scores for 14-year-olds have remained constant at 55 per cent.
135. Complaints Police have received scores of complaints about dealers openly plying their trade in front of small children on street corners.
136. DataEase scores because it combines good all-round capability with genuine ease of use.
137. One widely cited study has suggested that piano training at age 3 may improve some academic test scores.
138. Scores of existing officers will be released for active duty by the creation of a police civil service.
139. Scores of schools were shown to have similar structural defects.
140. If the adventurers try to reach location 14 they will have to pass scores of biting faces and clutching hands.
141. Father Young helped scores of divorced Catholics find a comfortable corner in the Church[sentencedict.com], but he could not change canon law.
142. Before, archery was a series of flights of shooters aiming at a target and counting up their scores.
143. Shehee ran for 124 yards and two scores on 24 carries.
144. Four months after the self-determination speech he received a rude awakening on both scores.
145. Stravinsky confessed that he borrowed the idea from Tchaikovsky and his own example was followed by later composers of specially commissioned scores.
146. As the scores were read out like a football draw it became clear that it would be a close contest.
147. Most programs even count the percentage of passives and provide scores, like an arcade game.
148. Test scores can be compared directly with the scores obtained by normal children of the same chronological age.
149. The process demands simpler information than a collection of attainment target scores.
150. Scores of less famous graduates ascended to the top levels of the financial and corporate worlds.
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.