noun, plural scores, score for 11, verb, scored, scor⋅ing.| 1. | the record of points or strokes made by the competitors in a game or match. |
| 2. | the total points or strokes made by one side, individual, play, game, etc. |
| 3. | an act or instance of making or earning a point or points. |
| 4. | Education, Psychology. the performance of an individual or sometimes of a group on an examination or test, expressed by a number, letter, or other symbol. |
| 5. | a notch, scratch, or incision; a stroke or line. |
| 6. | a notch or mark for keeping an account or record. |
| 7. | a reckoning or account so kept; tally. |
| 8. | any account showing indebtedness. |
| 9. | an amount recorded as due. |
| 10. | a line drawn as a boundary, the starting point of a race, a goal line, etc. |
| 11. | a group or set of 20: about a score of years ago. |
| 12. | scores, a great many: Scores of people were at the dance. |
| 13. | a reason, ground, or cause: to complain on the score of low pay. |
| 14. | Informal.
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| 15. | Music.
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| 16. | Slang.
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| 17. | to gain for addition to one's score in a game or match. |
| 18. | to make a score of: He scored 98 on the test. |
| 19. | to have as a specified value in points: Four aces score 100. |
| 20. | Education, Psychology. to evaluate the responses a person has made on (a test or an examination). |
| 21. | Music.
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| 22. | Cookery. to cut ridges or lines into (meat, fish, etc.) with shallow slashes, usually in a diamond pattern, before cooking. |
| 23. | to make notches, cuts, marks, or lines in or on. |
| 24. | to record or keep a record of (points, items, etc.), by or as if by notches, marks, etc.; tally; reckon (often fol. by up). |
| 25. | to write down as a debt. |
| 26. | to record as a debtor. |
| 27. | to gain, achieve, or win: The play scored a great success. |
| 28. | Slang.
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| 29. | to berate or censure: The newspapers scored the mayor severely for the announcement. |
| 30. | to crease (paper or cardboard) so that it can be folded easily and without damage. |
| 31. | to make a point or points in a game or contest. |
| 32. | to keep score, as of a game. |
| 33. | to achieve an advantage or a success: The new product scored with the public. |
| 34. | to make notches, cuts, lines, etc. |
| 35. | to run up a score or debt. |
| 36. | Slang.
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| 37. | pay off or settle a score, to avenge a wrong; retaliate: In the Old West they paid off a score with bullets. |

score (skôr)
n.
A result of a test or examination, usually expressed numerically.