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View definitions for report card

report card

noun as in student grade report

Strongest matches

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Example Sentences

Though politicians often speak of markets as if they represent a comprehensive report card on the economy’s health, they don’t.

Then, only five years later, the report card noted a new low, 18 percent below 2007.

You mentioned your dad with the expectations of the straight A’s in the report card.

It’s hard to give Johnson a report card, with just a month or two on the job—but we have clues for the direction she is thinking to take the company in.

From Fortune

One will be to see where they stood on their last report card before the pandemic began.

Voters are given a simple report card of where candidates stand.

Only 56 of every 100 university students complete their degree, according to the ISAT report card.

Bear with me, and we'll hold a magnifying glass to their generosity, including their recent sorry report card from CharityWatch.

Twenty years on, the report card on that gathering looks modest, at best.

The report card suggests that pediatricians play a crucial role in early detection.

I keep the record of the credits earned in a notebook, and place the number earned by each pupil on the monthly report card.

The city of Los Angeles, California, uses a plan of marking home work on the report card and giving no other incentive.

A daily report card was made out each morning and forwarded to the office of the chief engineer.

I also have the first monthly report card ever issued in Little Rock.

I signed my own report card, wrote my own notes when I played hooky and missed school.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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