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- Dictionaryscope/skəʊp/
noun
- 1. the extent of the area or subject matter that something deals with or to which it is relevant: "we widened the scope of our investigation" Similar
- 2. the opportunity or possibility to do or deal with something: "the scope for major change is always limited by political realities" Similar
verb
- 1. assess or investigate something: "they'd scoped out their market"
- 2. look at carefully; scan: informal North American "they watched him scoping the room, looking for Michael"
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SCOPE definition: 1. the range of a subject covered by a book, programme, discussion, class, etc.: 2. the…. Learn more.
The meaning of SCOPE is intention, object. How to use scope in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Scope.
Scope definition: extent or range of view, outlook, application, operation, effectiveness, etc.. See examples of SCOPE used in a sentence.
Definitions of scope. noun. the state of the environment in which a situation exists. synonyms: background, setting. see more. noun. an area in which something acts or operates or has power or control: "the range of a supersonic jet" “within the scope of an investigation” synonyms: ambit, compass, orbit, range, reach. see more. noun.
the range of a subject covered by a book, program, discussion, class, etc.: beyond/outside the scope of I'm afraid that problem is beyond/ outside the scope of my lecture. within the scope of Oil painting does not come within the scope of a class of this kind.
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.
1. uncountable noun [NOUN to-infinitive] If there is scope for a particular kind of behaviour or activity, people have the opportunity to behave in this way or do that activity. He believed in giving his staff scope for initiative. [ + for] Banks had increased scope to develop new financial products.