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scoreless

 - 5 dictionary results

score

[skawr, skohr] noun, plural scores, score for 11, verb, scored, scor⋅ing.
–noun
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.
a. the basic facts, point of progress, etc., regarding a situation: What's the score on Saturday's picnic?
b. a successful move, remark, etc.
15. Music.
a. a written or printed piece of music with all the vocal and instrumental parts arranged on staves, one under the other.
b. the music itself.
c. the music played as background to or part of a movie, play, or television presentation.
16. Slang.
a. a success in finding a willing sexual partner; sexual conquest.
b. a purchase or acquisition of illicit drugs, as heroin or cocaine.
c. a single payoff obtained through graft by a police officer, esp. from a narcotics violator.
d. a successful robbery; theft.
e. any success, triumph, happy acquisition, gift, or win.
f. the victim of a robbery or swindle.
–verb (used with object)
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.
a. to orchestrate.
b. to write out in score.
c. to compose the music for (a movie, play, television show, etc.)
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.
a. to obtain (a drug) illicitly.
b. to steal.
c. to acquire; be given.
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.
–verb (used without object)
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.
a. to succeed in finding a willing sexual partner; have coitus.
b. to purchase or obtain drugs illicitly.
c. to elicit and accept a bribe.
37. pay off or settle a score, to avenge a wrong; retaliate: In the Old West they paid off a score with bullets.

Origin:
bef. 1100; (n.) ME; late OE scora, score (pl.; sing. *scoru) group of twenty (appar. orig. notch) < ON skor notch; (v.) ME scoren to incise, mark with lines, tally debts < ON skora to notch, count by tallies; later v. senses deriv. of the n.; akin to shear


scoreless, adjective
scorer, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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score·less   (skôr'lĭs, skōr'-)   
adj.  Having no points scored.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Slang Dictionary
score

  1. in.
    to succeed. : I knew if I kept trying I could score.
  2. tv. & in.
    to obtain something; to obtain drugs or sex. (Very close to sense 1.) : Fred is always trying to score with women.
  3. n.
    the result of a scoring: drugs, loot, winnings, etc. : The crooks dropped the score as they made their getaway.
  4. in.
    [for a male] to copulate with a female; [for a female] to copulate with a male. (Usually objectionable.) : Fred can't think about anything but scoring with Martha.
  5. n.
    the client of a male or female prostitute. : She conked the score over the head and robbed him.
  6. n.
    a summary; a conclusion; the sum total. (See also bottom line.) : Okay, waiter, what's the score?
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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Word Origin & History

score 
late O.E. scoru "twenty," from O.N. skor "mark, tally," also, in Icelandic, "twenty," from P.Gmc. *skura-, from PIE base *(s)ker- "to cut" (cf. O.E. sceran; see shear). The connecting notion is perhaps counting large numbers (of sheep, etc.) with a notch in a stick for each 20. This counting notion is the origin of the modern sense in sports (1742, originally in whist). In O.Fr., "twenty" (vint) or a multiple of it could be used as a base, e.g. vint et doze ("32"), dous vinz et diz ("50"). Meaning "printed piece of music" first recorded 1701, from the practice of connecting related staves by scores of lines. The verb meaning "to cut with incisions or notches" is attested from c.1400; the slang sense "achieve intercourse" first recorded 1960.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

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

The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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