scorekeeper
IPA: skˈɔrkipɝ
noun
- Someone who keeps track of the score at a sporting event or other contest.
Advertisement
Examples of "scorekeeper" in Sentences
- Bids are recorded by the scorekeeper.
- The scorekeeper will add points to the table below.
- They are assisted by a timekeeper and a scorekeeper.
- The scorekeeper should keep track of who is supposed to deal.
- Obviously no official scorekeeper would ever actually use this.
- There is also a scorekeeper who records the scores of the teams.
- A player may always ask the scorekeeper what the social roll is during a game.
- As they left, some Indiana fans ran towards the scorer’s table and called the scorekeeper and clock operator cheaters.
- Rasmussen said he is simply a "scorekeeper," but his spike in clout has sharpened skepticism about how he tracks the dip in Democratic fortunes.
- Republican who was so disconnected with his brother's world and Illinois politics he was little more than a "scorekeeper" who kept tabs of donations.
- I mean, I really felt that my "scorekeeper" had kept a track of all my "broken promises" and how it has been feeding my perception of self in a negative light.
- That's not just my personal diagnosis as a doctor or a Republican; it's the conclusion of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office - the neutral "scorekeeper" that determines the cost of major bills.
- It is able to spend this way because it acts as the "scorekeeper" in the US monetary system whose function it is to mark up or mark down the monetary resources of all those who use its monopoly currency.
- According to the Congressional Budget Office, the official "scorekeeper" for federal legislation, the Republican health care proposal will reduce private health insurance premiums by up to 10 percent, expand coverage to three million uninsured people, and reduce the federal deficit by $68 billion over the next 10 years.
Advertisement
Advertisement