See also: Scorer

English

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Etymology

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score +‎ -er

Pronunciation

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Noun

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scorer (plural scorers)

  1. One who scores.
    Alan Shearer finished among the top ten goal scorers in 10 out of his 14 seasons in the Premier League and won the top scorer title three times..
    • 2012 April 21, Jonathan Jurejko, “Newcastle 3-0 Stoke”, in BBC Sport[1]:
      But chances were rare for the lowest scorers in the Premier League against a Newcastle defence which claimed a fourth straight clean sheet.
  2. One who keeps track of scores in a game; a scorekeeper.
    The team was making goals so fast the scorer could barely keep up.
  3. (cricket) Either of a pair of people, one provided by each side, who record in a specially formatted book, every ball bowled, every run scored, and every wicket that falls

Derived terms

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Translations

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Anagrams

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Danish

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Noun

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scorer

  1. indefinite plural of score

Verb

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scorer

  1. present of score

French

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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scorer

  1. (sports) to score (a goal)

Conjugation

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Norwegian Bokmål

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Noun

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scorer m

  1. indefinite plural of score

Verb

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scorer

  1. present of score

Romanian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from English scorer.

Noun

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scorer m (plural scoreri)

  1. scorer, scorekeeper

Declension

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