
Open English Wordnet
Nouns
(n)mark, grade, scorea number or letter indicating quality (especially of a student's performance)“she made good marks in algebra”,
“grade A milk”,
“what was your score on your homework?” (n)score, musical scorea written form of a musical composition; parts for different instruments appear on separate staves on large pages“he studied the score of the sonata” (n)scorea number that expresses the accomplishment of a team or an individual in a game or contest“the score was 7 to 0” (n)scorea set of twenty members“a score were sent out but only one returned” (n)score, accountgrounds“don't do it on my account”,
“the paper was rejected on account of its length”,
“he tried to blame the victim but his success on that score was doubtful” (n)scorethe facts about an actual situation“he didn't know the score” (n)scorean amount due (as at a restaurant or bar)“add it to my score and I'll settle later” (n)score, scotcha slight surface cut (especially a notch that is made to keep a tally) (n)grudge, score, grievancea resentment strong enough to justify retaliation“holding a grudge”,
“settling a score” (n)scorethe act of scoring in a game or sport“the winning score came with less than a minute left to play” (n)sexual conquest, scorea seduction culminating in sexual intercourse“calling his seduction of the girl a ‘score’ was a typical example of male slang” Verbs
(v)score, nock, markmake small marks into the surface of“score the clay before firing it” (v)scorewrite a musical score for (v)seduce, score, makeinduce to have sex“Harry finally seduced Sally”,
“Did you score last night?”,
“Harry made Sally” (v)scoreget a certain number or letter indicating quality or performance“She scored high on the SAT”,
“He scored a 200” (v)grade, score, markassign a grade or rank to, according to one's evaluation“grade tests”,
“score the SAT essays”,
“mark homework”