释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024scope /skoʊp/USA pronunciation n., v., scoped, scop•ing. n. - extent, limit or range of view, outlook, etc.:[uncountable]a question beyond the scope of this paper.
- opportunity for activity:[uncountable]to give one's fancy full scope.
- Optics[countable] a short form of microscope, radarscope, etc.
v. - Slang Termsto look at or over* examine:[~ + out + object]to scope out the situation.[~ + object + out]Scope this guy out!
-scope-, root. - -scope- comes from Greek, where it has the meaning "see.'' This meaning is found in such words as: fluoroscope, gyroscope, horoscope, microscope, microscopic, periscope, radioscopy, spectroscope, stethoscope, telescope, telescopic.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024scope (skōp),USA pronunciation n., v., scoped, scop•ing. n. - extent or range of view, outlook, application, operation, effectiveness, etc.:an investigation of wide scope.
- space for movement or activity;
opportunity for operation:to give one's fancy full scope. - extent in space;
a tract or area. - length:a scope of cable.
- aim or purpose.
- Linguistics, Philosophythe 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.
- Optics(used as a short form of microscope, oscilloscope, periscope, radarscope, riflescope, telescopic sight, etc.)
v.t. - Slang Termsto look at, read, or investigate, as in order to evaluate or appreciate.
- Slang Terms scope out:
- to look at or over;
examine; check out:a rock musician scoping out the audience before going on stage. - to master;
figure out:By the time we'd scoped out the problem, it was too late.
- Greek skopós aim, mark to shoot at; akin to skopeîn to look at (see -scope)
- Italian scopo
- 1525–35
scope′less, adj. - 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged See range.
- 2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged margin, room, liberty.
-scope, - Opticsa combining form meaning "instrument for viewing,'' used in the formation of compound words:telescope.Cf. -scopy.
- Greek -skopion, -skopeion, equivalent. to skop(eîn) to look at (akin to sképtesthai to look, view carefully; compare skeptic) + -ion, -eion noun, nominal suffix
- Neo-Latin -scopium
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: scope /skəʊp/ n - opportunity for exercising the faculties or abilities; capacity for action: plenty of scope for improvement
- range of view, perception, or grasp; outlook
- the area covered by an activity, topic, etc; range: the scope of his thesis was vast
- slack left in an anchor cable
- that part of an expression that is governed by a given operator: the scope of the negation in PV–(q∧r) is –(q∧r)
- informal
short for telescope, microscope, oscilloscope - archaic purpose or aim
Etymology: 16th Century: from Italian scopo goal, from Latin scopus, from Greek skopos target; related to Greek skopein to watch Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: -scope n combining form - indicating an instrument for observing, viewing, or detecting: microscope, stethoscope
Etymology: from New Latin -scopium, from Greek -skopion, from skopein to look at-scopic adj combining form |