0 past simple and past participle of score --
1 to win or get a point, goal, etc. in a competition, sport, game, or test: --
2 to get something: --
3 to make a mark or cut on the surface of something hard with a pointed tool, or to draw a line through writing: --
4 to write or change a piece of music for particular instruments or voices: --
Fearful adults scored extremely low and significantly lower than preoccupied and dismissing adults on the histrionic and narcissistic dimensions.
The same mutations, scored in homozygotes, might very well be deleterious.
The handwritten essays are then scanned and scored by two independent readers.
All comparison children scored at or above age level on both expressive and receptive language as measured by these tests.
Our findings show that the adult subjects scored very close to the ideal results, and the eleven-year-olds were not far behind.
Eleven items were scored on a 6-point scale (ranging from 1 to 6, respectively dissatisfied and very satisfied).
Much recent writing concerning the early eighteenth-century sonata has focused on a subgenre that appropriates stylistic elements from more fully scored works.
Perhaps the most vexing aspect of this validity threat is the problems associated with polytomously scored responses, specifically deciding how to weight partially correct responses.