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单词 scope
释义

scope


scope 1

S0154400 (skōp)n.1. The range of one's perceptions, thoughts, or actions: broaden one's scope by reading.2. The opportunity or possibility to function or be active: gave her imagination broad scope. See Synonyms at room.3. The extent of a given activity or subject that is involved, treated, or relevant: the scope of the debate. See Synonyms at range.4. The length or sweep of a mooring cable.5. Linguistics The range over a part of a sentence or discourse that a quantifier has an effect on.
[Italian scopo, aim, purpose, from Greek skopos, target, aim; see spek- in Indo-European roots.]

scope 2

(skōp)n. Informal A viewing instrument such as a periscope, microscope, or telescope.tr.v. scoped, scop·ing, scopes 1. To examine or investigate, especially visually: scoped the landscape for signs of wildlife.2. To examine using an optical instrument such as a telescope or an endoscope: scoped the stars around Orion; scoped the patient's esophagus.Phrasal Verb: scope out1. To make a preliminary inspection or investigation of: "That summer ... she'd scoped out a big estate auction in Bennington and spotted a beautiful burnt-umber and deep-blue Chinese rug" (Janna Malamud Smith).2. To seek by inspecting various possibilities: "Some of the islanders are expert fishing guides, eagerly showing up at the airport for the weekly flight from Honolulu to scope out clients" (Paul Theroux).
[From -scope (as in microscope periscope, etc.). Verb, probably from noun (perhaps influenced by scope).]

scope

(skəʊp) n1. opportunity for exercising the faculties or abilities; capacity for action: plenty of scope for improvement. 2. range of view, perception, or grasp; outlook3. the area covered by an activity, topic, etc; range: the scope of his thesis was vast. 4. (Nautical Terms) nautical slack left in an anchor cable5. (Logic) logic linguistics that part of an expression that is governed by a given operator: the scope of the negation in PV–(qr) is –(qr)6. informal short for telescope, microscope, oscilloscope7. archaic purpose or aimvb (tr) informal to look at or examine carefully[C16: from Italian scopo goal, from Latin scopus, from Greek skopos target; related to Greek skopein to watch]

scope

(skoʊp)

n., v. scoped, scop•ing. n. 1. extent or range of view, outlook, application, operation, effectiveness, etc.: an investigation of wide scope. 2. opportunity or freedom for movement or activity: to give one's fancy full scope. 3. extent in space; a tract or area. 4. length: a scope of cable. 5. (used as a short form of microscope, periscope, radarscope, etc.) 6. Ling., Logic. the range of words or elements of an expression over which a modifier or operator has control: In “old men and women,” “old” may either take “men and women” or just “men” in its scope. 7. aim or purpose. v.t. 8. Slang. to look at or over; examine (often fol. by out). [1525–35; < Italian scopo < Greek skopós aim, mark to shoot at; compare -scope]

-scope

a combining form meaning “instrument for viewing”: telescope. [< New Latin -scopium < Greek -skopion, -skopeion, derivative of skopeîn to look at (akin to sképtesthai to look, view carefully; compare skeptic)]

scope

- First meant "target for shooting," from Greek skopos, "target."See also related terms for shooting.
Thesaurus
Noun1.scope - an area in which something acts or operates or has power or control: scope - an area in which something acts or operates or has power or control: "the range of a supersonic jet"; "a piano has a greater range than the human voice"; "the ambit of municipal legislation"; "within the compass of this article"; "within the scope of an investigation"; "outside the reach of the law"; "in the political orbit of a world power"ambit, range, reach, compass, orbitextent - the distance or area or volume over which something extends; "the vast extent of the desert"; "an orchard of considerable extent"approximate range, ballpark - near to the scope or range of something; "his answer wasn't even in the right ballpark"confines - a bounded scope; "he stayed within the confines of the city"contrast - the range of optical density and tone on a photographic negative or print (or the extent to which adjacent areas on a television screen differ in brightness)internationality, internationalism - quality of being international in scope; "he applauded the internationality of scientific terminology"latitude - scope for freedom of e.g. action or thought; freedom from restrictionpurview, horizon, view - the range of interest or activity that can be anticipated; "It is beyond the horizon of present knowledge"expanse, sweep - a wide scope; "the sweep of the plains"gamut - a complete extent or range: "a face that expressed a gamut of emotions"spectrum - a broad range of related objects or values or qualities or ideas or activitiespalette, pallet - the range of colour characteristic of a particular artist or painting or school of art
2.scope - the state of the environment in which a situation exists; "you can't do that in a university setting"setting, backgroundenvironment - the totality of surrounding conditions; "he longed for the comfortable environment of his living room"canvass, canvas - the setting for a narrative or fictional or dramatic account; "the crowded canvas of history"; "the movie demanded a dramatic canvas of sound"show window, showcase - a setting in which something can be displayed to best effect; "it was a showcase for democracy in Africa"
3.scope - a magnifier of images of distant objectsscope - a magnifier of images of distant objectstelescopeaperture - a device that controls amount of light admittedastronomical telescope - any telescope designed to collect and record electromagnetic radiation from cosmic sourcescollimator - a small telescope attached to a large telescope to use in setting the line of the larger oneequatorial - a telescope whose mounting has only two axes of motion, one parallel to the Earth's axis and the other one at right angles to itview finder, viewfinder, finder - optical device that helps a user to find the target of interestmagnifier - a scientific instrument that magnifies an imageoptical prism, prism - optical device having a triangular shape and made of glass or quartz; used to deviate a beam or invert an imagesolar telescope - a telescope designed to make observations of the suntransit instrument - a telescope mounted on an axis running east and west and used to time the transit of a celestial body across the meridian
4.scope - electronic equipment that provides visual images of varying electrical quantitiesscope - electronic equipment that provides visual images of varying electrical quantitiescathode-ray oscilloscope, CRO, oscilloscopecardiac monitor, heart monitor - a piece of electronic equipment for continual observation of the function of the heartcathode-ray tube, CRT - a vacuum tube in which a hot cathode emits a beam of electrons that pass through a high voltage anode and are focused or deflected before hitting a phosphorescent screenelectronic equipment - equipment that involves the controlled conduction of electrons (especially in a gas or vacuum or semiconductor)monitoring device, monitor - display produced by a device that takes signals and displays them on a television screen or a computer monitormicrowave radar, radar, radio detection and ranging, radiolocation - measuring instrument in which the echo of a pulse of microwave radiation is used to detect and locate distant objects

scope

noun1. opportunity, room, freedom, play, chance, space, possibility, liberty, latitude, elbowroom, leeway He believed in giving his staff scope for initiative.2. range, capacity, reach, area, extent, confines, outlook, orbit, span, sphere, compass, remit, terms of reference, ambit, purview, field of reference the scope of a novel

scope

noun1. The extent of one's perception, understanding, knowledge, or vision:horizon, ken, purview, range, reach.2. The ability or power to seize or attain:capacity, compass, grasp, range, reach.3. Suitable opportunity to accept or allow something:elbowroom, latitude, leeway, margin, play, room.4. An area within which something or someone exists, acts, or has influence or power:ambit, compass, extension, extent, orbit, purview, range, reach, realm, sphere, sweep, swing.
Translations
机会机遇范围

scope

(skəup) noun1. (often with for) the opportunity or chance to do, use or develop. There's no scope for originality in this job. 機會,餘地 机遇,机会 2. the area or extent of an activity etc. Few things are beyond the scope of a child's imagination. 範圍 范围

scope


scope out

1. To make a preliminary investigation, inspection, or analysis of something. A noun or pronoun can be used between "scope" and "out." We need to scope out some locations for the music video this weekend. Someone's gotta scope the joint out before we can hit it.2. verb, slang To look with interest at someone who one finds attractive. A noun or pronoun can be used between "scope" and "out." He spent the whole date scoping out other girls, so, no, I don't think it went very well. There's some girl at the bar scoping you out, Chris—you should go over and talk to her.See also: out, scope

scope on (one)

slang To regard or look at one with sexual attraction or interest. He spent the whole date scoping on other girls, so, no, I don't think it went very well. There's some girl at the bar scoping on you, Chris—you should go over and talk to her.See also: on, scope

scope (on) someone

Sl. to evaluate a member of the opposite sex visually. He scoped every girl who came in the door. He wouldn't like it if somebody scoped on him. Or would he?

scope someone or something out

Sl. to look someone or something over; to check someone or something out. Hey, scope the new car out! Dave was scoping out all the girls.See also: out, scope

scope out

v. To make a preliminary inspection of something: The crew scoped out possible locations for the movie. Before the thieves robbed the bank, they spent weeks scoping it out.See also: out, scope

scope (on) someone

tv. & in. to evaluate a member of the opposite sex visually. He scoped every girl who came in the door. See also: on, scope, someone

scope someone

verbSee scope on someoneSee also: scope, someone

scope someone out

tv. to look someone over; to check someone out. Dave was scoping out all the girls. See also: out, scope, someone

scope


scope

1. Nautical slack left in an anchor cable 2. Logic linguistics that part of an expression that is governed by a given operator: the scope of the negation in PV--(qr) is --(qr)

Scope

The extent or intention of the construction activity, also the portion of the plans, specifications, and addenda on which the contractor has based its bid.

scope

[skōp] (computer science) For a variable in a computer program, the portion of the computer program within which the variable can be accessed (used or changed). (electronics) cathode-ray oscilloscope radarscope (engineering) The work that will actually be done on a project as documented by the terms in a contract.

SCOPE

(project)Software Evaluation and Certification ProgrammeEurope.

An ESPRIT project.

scope

(programming)The scope of an identifier is the region of aprogram source within which it represents a certain thing.This usually extends from the place where it is declared tothe end of the smallest enclosing block (begin/end orprocedure/function body). An inner block may contain aredeclaration of the same identifier in which case the scopeof the outer declaration does not include (is "shadowed" or"occluded" by) the scope of the inner.

See also activation record, dynamic scope, lexical scope.

scope

(1) A range of IP addresses.

(2) In programming, the visibility of variables within a program; for example, whether one function can use a variable created in another function.

(3) A CRT screen, such as used on an oscilloscope or common display terminal.

(4) See search scope.

scope


'scope'

noun The 'short form' for any complex optical system–eg, endoscope, microscope verb To perform endoscopy

Patient discussion about scope

Q. I am scheduled for scope surgery for a torn meniscus on my knee and what is the duration for recovery? Has anyone had this surgery for a torn meniscus? How did you deal with this recovery?A. The recovery process is individual, and you cannot predict it in advance. I know someone who has done it and was able to go back to exercising regularly after 2 months. I would think the recovery from the surgery itself is a matter of few weeks until you can walk properly, however you should still give your knee a break and rest for a while after.

More discussions about scope

Scope


Scope

In business, the objectives and parameters of a project or department. Good management prevents a project from going beyond its scope, which may require more resources, take up more time, and lead to a less focused conclusion.

SCOPE


AcronymDefinition
SCOPESchool of Continuing and Professional Education (various locations)
SCOPEScientific Committee On Problems of the Environment
SCOPEService Core for Open Publishing Environments
SCOPEScalable Object Processing Environment
SCOPEStructuring Content for Online Publishing Environments
SCOPEStudy on Cognition and Prognosis in the Elderly (drug trial)
SCOPEStanding Conference of Public Enterprises
SCOPEShooters' Committee on Political Education
SCOPESociety for Conservation and Protection of Environment (Pakistan)
SCOPESimple Communications Programming Environment
SCOPESchedule, Cost, Performance
SCOPEStrategic Committee on Postsecondary Education (Kentucky)
SCOPESan Clemente Ocean Probing Experiment (US NOAA)
SCOPEScomi Precision Engineering Sdn Bhd (Malaysia)
SCOPESalvadoran Children of the Poor Education Foundation
SCOPEScalable Object Processing Environment (CreamWare GmbH)
SCOPESpecial Committee on Paperless Entries
SCOPESacramento Council of Parent Educators
SCOPESouthern California Offshore Powerboat Elite
SCOPESafety-Controls Optimization by Performance Evaluation
SCOPESupply Chain Operational Performance Evaluator
SCOPESarasota County Openly Plans for Excellence, Inc.
SCOPESystem Concept of Operation Evaluator
SCOPESurrey Community Outreach Program for Employment (British Columbia, Canada)
SCOPEStandard Chartered Operations
SCOPEStudent Career Options and Placement Experiences
SCOPESupply Chain Opportunities Enhancement
SCOPENickname for HQ USAF programs usually connected with communications
SCOPESimple Check-Out Oriented Program Language
SCOPESystem Capable of Programmed Expansion (High Frequency Communications System)
SCOPESheriff's Community Organized Policing Effort (Maricopa County, AZ)

scope


  • noun

Synonyms for scope

noun opportunity

Synonyms

  • opportunity
  • room
  • freedom
  • play
  • chance
  • space
  • possibility
  • liberty
  • latitude
  • elbowroom
  • leeway

noun range

Synonyms

  • range
  • capacity
  • reach
  • area
  • extent
  • confines
  • outlook
  • orbit
  • span
  • sphere
  • compass
  • remit
  • terms of reference
  • ambit
  • purview
  • field of reference

Synonyms for scope

noun the extent of one's perception, understanding, knowledge, or vision

Synonyms

  • horizon
  • ken
  • purview
  • range
  • reach

noun the ability or power to seize or attain

Synonyms

  • capacity
  • compass
  • grasp
  • range
  • reach

noun suitable opportunity to accept or allow something

Synonyms

  • elbowroom
  • latitude
  • leeway
  • margin
  • play
  • room

noun an area within which something or someone exists, acts, or has influence or power

Synonyms

  • ambit
  • compass
  • extension
  • extent
  • orbit
  • purview
  • range
  • reach
  • realm
  • sphere
  • sweep
  • swing

Synonyms for scope

noun an area in which something acts or operates or has power or control: "the range of a supersonic jet"

Synonyms

  • ambit
  • range
  • reach
  • compass
  • orbit

Related Words

  • extent
  • approximate range
  • ballpark
  • confines
  • contrast
  • internationality
  • internationalism
  • latitude
  • purview
  • horizon
  • view
  • expanse
  • sweep
  • gamut
  • spectrum
  • palette
  • pallet

noun the state of the environment in which a situation exists

Synonyms

  • setting
  • background

Related Words

  • environment
  • canvass
  • canvas
  • show window
  • showcase

noun a magnifier of images of distant objects

Synonyms

  • telescope

Related Words

  • aperture
  • astronomical telescope
  • collimator
  • equatorial
  • view finder
  • viewfinder
  • finder
  • magnifier
  • optical prism
  • prism
  • solar telescope
  • transit instrument

noun electronic equipment that provides visual images of varying electrical quantities

Synonyms

  • cathode-ray oscilloscope
  • CRO
  • oscilloscope

Related Words

  • cardiac monitor
  • heart monitor
  • cathode-ray tube
  • CRT
  • electronic equipment
  • monitoring device
  • monitor
  • microwave radar
  • radar
  • radio detection and ranging
  • radiolocation
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更新时间:2024/11/12 3:43:30