A score is 20 and so four score and five thousand = 5,080
Psalm 90:10 in King James Version
In the King James version The word - threescore - appears 93 times, but the phrase - threescore and three - does not appear at all the phrase - three score and three - does not appear at all
"Three score" means 60. The word "score" in this sense means 20 of something, a usage that was more common in the past than it is now.
Oh, dude, "woe" is mentioned a bunch of times in the Bible, like over a hundred times. It's like the biblical way of saying, "Oh no, things are not going well." So yeah, if you're keeping score, that's a lot of woes in that old book.
In the book of Psalms in the bible , mans life is to be three score and a half . Or 70 years.
Psalm 90:10 in King James Version
The term 'score' is not found in many English translations.
In the King James version The word - threescore - appears 93 times, but the phrase - threescore and three - does not appear at all the phrase - three score and three - does not appear at all
Four score and seven years = 87 years. A "score" is 20. Abraham Lincoln used this phrase as a fancy way of referring to the founding of the country (in 1776) in his Gettysburg Address, the speech he gave at the dedication of a cemetery for those who died in that devastating Civil War battle. Lincoln likely intended an allusion to familiar biblical language (King James Version), especially to Psalm 90, in which the human life span is said to be "three score years and ten".
It is not necessarily a 'Biblical' meaning as a score is an accepted number in mathematics. One score = 20, so therefore threescore = 60
The Highest Score For The Galvanic Hammer is Ten Thousand
ten thousand and sixty 10,060 a score is 20 so therefore threescore is 3x20=60, simple
"Three score" means 60. The word "score" in this sense means 20 of something, a usage that was more common in the past than it is now.
Ali Score's birth name is Alister James Score.
This question has been answered."90.A "score" is 20. Four score = 80The term "score" was a commonly-used Middle English word, from the Old English "scoru," which meant "twenty." More than likely this, in turn, came from the Norse skor.As a side note, the term "score" in this context was a common English term even in the early days of the USA; Abraham Lincoln's famous Gettysburg Address includes the phrase, "Four score and 7 years ago." There is nothing inherently religious about it, except that the term is used often in the King James Version of the Bible.Biblically, the correct term is 'three-score years and ten' (Psalm 90: 10) suggesting that the normal lifespan in Biblical times was 70."
It is not possible to turn of your Snapchat score with the current version of Snapchat.
Score is twenty, four score is eighty. You might be describing 185,000 but that's an odd way to put it.