No. Scores is a noun (plural of score) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of score).
consistent = adjective example sentence: She is making consistent progress. consistently = adverb example: Her scores are consistently improving.
Only in combination with conjunctions or adverbs, as in "even though" and "even if." Otherwise even can be an adjective (e.g. the scores were even). Or it can be an adverb (e.g. even greater).
No, it's a verb. It means to exceed, to do better than, to move ahead of someone/ something. The Olympic swimmers hope they will surpass the scores they got four years ago.
The term seesaw is one word, not hyphenated. The synonym, teeter-totter often is.The term can be used as an adjective to describe shifting situations, such as sports scores.
The word forward is an adverb, an adjective, a noun, and a verb; for example: Adverb: I ran forward to make the play. Adjective: The forward seats have the most room. Noun: The forward scores the most point on the team. Verb: My mother will forward my mail while I'm overseas.
If the distribution is Gaussian (or Normal) use z-scores. If it is Student's t, then use t-scores.
Adding all the scores and dividing by the number of scores yields the mean or average.
"Scores" is present tense.
netball scores are people who keep track of how many goals each team scores ;)
You can't do this without knowing the distribution of scores.
Cribbage
i do not know the scores please