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scorecard

/skawr-kahrd, skohr-/US // ˈskɔrˌkɑrd, ˈskoʊr- //UK // (ˈskɔːˌkɑːd) //

记分卡,计分卡,打分卡,评分卡

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a card for keeping score of a sports contest and, especially in team sports, for identifying the players by name, number, and position.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Each organization has committed to changing aspects of its business model, which will be audited annually via a scorecard system.

  • If you want to get a sense of how prepared your state is for voting by mail, the Brookings Institution has given each state a scorecard.

  • In 2020, the HRC gave him a 0 out of 100 rating on their congressional scorecard.

  • Someone hired by Arise would listen to some of the agent’s calls and then send him a scorecard — with 40 items.

  • The day before the most recent issue of Fortune magazine went to press, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation released its 2020 Goalkeepers Report, the philanthropy’s latest scorecard on the global war on poverty and disease.

  • Obama also mentioned the College Scorecard (which, unfortunately, as of this writing, is not working).

  • If you look at the scorecard for the last six years, we are still falling behind.

  • As a result, the figures in the College Scorecard on student debt at graduation include parent loans.

  • The scorecard is ugly on that front, providing yet another reason for Democrats to accept a government shutdown, however painful.

  • “The scorecard is designed to give them a clear sense of where members of Congress stand,” Glaze says.

  • Thomas was as easy to read as an amateur's scorecard; runs were runs, hits were hits, outs were outs.

scorecard - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary