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score

[skawr, skohr] / skɔr, skoʊr /


NOUN
musical arrangement
Synonyms








Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

SCORE, Folk said, was only willing to accept minimum security cases, people who are incarcerated for only brief stretches.

From Seattle Times • Sep. 22, 2023

“This generation is different,” said Jamia Stokes, a senior director at SCORE, an education nonprofit.

From Seattle Times • Mar. 8, 2023

Through SCORE, Lehrer was assigned to a mentor named Norman Sherman, himself a retired baby boomer entrepreneur.

From Washington Post • Feb. 25, 2022

SCORE, a nonprofit affiliated with the S.B.A., provides a Small Business Resilience Hub that lists financial tools and resources, as well as access to mentoring and educational workshops nationwide.

From New York Times • Nov. 16, 2020

To scour or score off; to run away: perhaps from SCORE; i.e. full speed, or as fast as legs would carry one.

From 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue by Grose, Francis




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