Score
Look up score or scorer in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Score or scorer may refer to:
- Test score, the result of an exam or test
- A groove cut into a surface in engineering
- A joining technique in pottery
- Term for robbery
- Score, slang for sexual intercourse and other sexual activities
- Scoreboarding, a centralized method for dynamically scheduling a pipeline in the CDC 6600 computer
Business
- Bauer Inverness, formally Score Inverness, a former radio company
- Score Media, a former Canadian media company
Mathematics
- The number 20
- Raw score, an original datum that has not been transformed
- Standard score, a quantity derived from the raw score
- Score (statistics), a quantity in statistics
- Score test, a statistical test
- Scorer's function, solutions to differential equations
Media and arts
- Musical scores, usually involving sheet music
- Score, a football comic which became Scorcher in 1971
- Score (film), a 1972 sexplotaition film
- Event score, written or printed instructions for a visual art performance
- Acting scores in the theatre and film
- Score: A Hockey Musical, a 2010 Canadian musical film
- Score, a pornographic magazine by The Score Group
- Score (Dream Theater album)
Sports and games
- Score (game), a number of points achieved in a game
- Score (sport), a number of points achieved in a sporting event
- "Score", an ancient prophecy in the game Tales of the Abyss
- Score Entertainment, makers of the Dragon Ball Z trading card game
- Herb Score, former Major League baseball player
- Scorer, a cricket position
- Scoreboard, a large board for publicly displaying the score in a game
- Scorecard, a record for scorekeeping
- Score bug, a graphic displayed on a screen during the broadcast of a sports game to display the current score and other statistics
- Score sheet, a sheet of paper used to record a game (see Glossary of chess#Score sheet)
See also
- Dance score
- SCORE (disambiguation)
- Scores (disambiguation)
- The Score (disambiguation)
- Point (disambiguation)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, January 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.