Scope - Dictionary Of English

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scope [links] UK:**UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/ˈskəʊp/US:USA pronunciation: IPA and respellingUSA pronunciation: IPA/skoʊp/ ,USA pronunciation: respelling(skōp) ⓘ One or more forum threads is an exact match of your searched term in Spanish | in French | English synonyms | English Collocations | English Usage | Conjugator | in context | images Inflections of 'scope' (v): (⇒ conjugate)scopesv 3rd person singular scopingv pres p scopedv past scopedv past p WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026scope /skoʊp/USA pronunciation n., v., scoped, scop•ing. n.
  1. extent, limit or range of view, outlook, etc.:[uncountable]a question beyond the scope of this paper.
  2. opportunity for activity:[uncountable]to give one's fancy full scope.
  3. Optics[countable] a short form of microscope, radarscope, etc.
v.
  1. Slang Termsto look at or over; examine:[~ + out + object]to scope out the situation.[~ + object + out]Scope this guy out!
-scope-, root.
  1. -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 © 2026scope (skōp),USA pronunciation n., v., scoped, scop•ing. n.
  1. extent or range of view, outlook, application, operation, effectiveness, etc.:an investigation of wide scope.
  2. space for movement or activity; opportunity for operation:to give one's fancy full scope.
  3. extent in space; a tract or area.
  4. length:a scope of cable.
  5. aim or purpose.
  6. 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.
  7. Optics(used as a short form of microscope, oscilloscope, periscope, radarscope, riflescope, telescopic sight, etc.)
v.t.
  1. Slang Termsto look at, read, or investigate, as in order to evaluate or appreciate.
  2. 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 range. 2. margin, room, liberty.
-scope,
  1. 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
  1. opportunity for exercising the faculties or abilities; capacity for action: plenty of scope for improvement
  2. range of view, perception, or grasp; outlook
  3. the area covered by an activity, topic, etc; range: the scope of his thesis was vast
  4. slack left in an anchor cable
  5. 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, oscilloscope
  7. 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
  1. 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 'scope' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations): add - aggrandize - ambit - amplitude - area - beyond - bind - bound - broad - cognizance - colposcope - comprehensive - coterminous - determine - dimension - domain - elbowroom - enlarge - epistemology - exhaustive - expand - extend - extensive - extent - extra- - gauge - horizon - horoscope - huge - kaleidoscope - laparoscope - large - latitude - limited - massive - minor - mission creep - nationalize - parapsychology - parochial - past - periscope - play - positivism - preface - preternatural - purview - region - room - abridge In Lists: Top 2000 English words, Hunting, False friends EN-IT - Falsi amici EN-IT, more...Synonyms: reach, range, field, extent, span, more...Collocations: includes a [wide, large, narrow, limited, broad] scope of, scope out the [store, situation, market, competitors], is a [wide] scope of [options, possibilities, investigation], more...

🗣️Forum discussions with the word(s) "scope" in the title:

...is to miss its wider scope and to limit its provocative potential. 'The scope of this (or the) new constitution' - capital C? “Even outlining a scope of lecture program” [the scope of] vandalize a scope and scale aim and aspect [from Textbooks] [scope v. aspect] ambiguity/scope of negation/ can ... no an ample scope an expression for "not in a scope of a person's consideration" As big tech’s scope expands been very tiny in scope behind him (the scope of the modification) beyond other scope procedures "beyond the scope of this contribution" and variations broad scope of powers broaden/widen/extend/expand horizon [+ scope, compass] Business License, Business scope But I have plenty of scope. But more the scope of the problem is ----- Can "cover" indicate a scope of effects and responsibilities? Clarendon Schools - scope of meaning deemed surrogacy to fall outside the proper scope of the market deleted or omitted from the scope Difference between "scope" and "objective" disappearance of referents outside the scope of 'must' do something with real <scope> economies of scope Everybody found a cat and kept it. It ran away. [scope of 'everybody'] Examination scope extent/scope more...Visit the English Only Forum.Help WordReference: Ask in the forums yourself. Look up "scope" at Merriam-Webster Look up "scope" at dictionary.com
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Tag » What Does The Root Scope Mean