Antonym: neglect. Similar words: tiny, cut in, put in, routine, cut into, routinely, brutal, in truth. Meaning: ['skruːtnɪ /-tɪnɪ] n. 1. the act of examining something closely (as for mistakes) 2. a prolonged intense look.
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31. However experienced and confident staff normally feel, subjecting their professional work to open scrutiny brings anxiety.
32. Registers of contaminated land would be available for public scrutiny from April 1993.
33. It's been a tough and bruising campaign, with the backgrounds of both candidates coming under intense scrutiny.
34. Efforts to stain paper artificially to give an appearance of age have little hope of withstanding careful scrutiny.
35. It reformed the judicial system, buttressing its independence, and introduced parliamentary scrutiny of important public sector contracts and appointments.
36. Every activity of the individual citizen is subject to scrutiny by the state, in the name of the public interest.
37. In the United States a number of factors have combined to render the bureaucracy more open to public scrutiny.
38. I had a feeling that his logic would not bear close scrutiny but was too numb to argue with the ancient greenkeeper.
39. A close scrutiny of films showing lions killing zebras does not bear this out.
40. Federal Trade Commission officials would not comment on the deal[Sentencedict.com], but are expected by industry experts to give it close scrutiny.
41. This is judicial scrutiny and the power of the courts to regulate telephone-tapping and to deal with illegal or improper conduct.
42. This time, when his glance slid over her, his scrutiny was compounded of interest and a totally male appreciation.
43. The budgetary process focuses more clearly on the resource allocation process with more thorough scrutiny of existing commitments.
44. Tighter airline scrutiny of the size and amount of carry-on luggage.
45. Only when a firm is put into play or bid for is the management's performance given any scrutiny.
46. The human capacity for love comes under especially close scrutiny.
47. Journalists now subject him to the scrutiny he avoided in his stealthy rise.
48. Government works best under the glare of public scrutiny. Absent such scrutiny, abuses occur. Stephen Hawking
49. Their budgets are closely controlled by Congress and any departmental legislative proposals will have to run the gauntlet of Congressional scrutiny.
50. Brenner's remarkably assured claims did, however[Sentencedict.com], invite considerable interest and scrutiny among social and medical researchers.
51. True, most of these beliefs contain grains of truth, but their omnipotent power does not survive close scrutiny.
52. Campaigners against the arms trade also voiced concern that the Government is still refusing to allow Parliament proper scrutiny of exports.
53. In Northern Ireland the loyalist ceasefire is under scrutiny after bombs were planted at sports grounds.
54. Under that boldly amused scrutiny, her smart white gabardine culottes suddenly failed to cover quite enough bare, slender brown leg.
55. For the bureaucracy itself, Marx noted how a Bonapartist regime virtually eliminated the risk of public scrutiny and criticism.
56. He said the company came under scrutiny along with other insurers after allegations were first made against Metropolitan Life in 1993.
57. But Justice hesitated; it had never before asked any federal court to hold gender-based classification to the strict scrutiny standard.
58. Of course, it is not just audit regulation that has been under scrutiny in 1992.
59. From close scrutiny, it soon emerges that they all have several features in common.
60. The design of each of the new qualifications is currently being subjected to intensive scrutiny and consultation.
More similar words: tiny, cut in, put in, routine, cut into, routinely, brutal, in truth, crush, cruise, crucial, recruit, screw, script, screen, scream, scratch, scramble, describe, screening, subscriber, discretion, description, prescription, utilize, utility, discrimination, executive, pollution, execution.