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词汇 report card
释义

Definition of report card in English:

report card

noun
North American
  • 1A teacher's written assessment of a pupil's work, progress, and conduct, sent home to a parent or guardian.

    〈主北美〉(给家长的)学生成绩报告单

    he came home with a straight B report card
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Did you know that we get report cards Thursday?
    • Despite Reuven's straight A report card in school, he is lonely and sad.
    • Okafor is a rarity: a true student-athlete, he carried a 3.8 GPA through his Finance major at university and once cried as a boy because he got a ‘B’ on his report card.
    • George Harrison left school in 1959, a working-class teenager with no qualifications and a report card that stated: ‘I cannot tell you what his work is like because he has not done any.’
    • His grades had dropped dramatically, from A's and B's to C's and D's, even an F on his last report card.
    • The ‘family’ window includes a framed 1953 picture of Voss' mother with her report card and a picture of his grandmother on her 100th birthday.
    • It reversed our feelings of shame about our actual high school report cards.
    • To assist me in my evaluation, I will employ the circa 1981-88 Fairfax County, Virginia elementary school report card.
    • Show your parents your report card, and make sure it's full of A's.
    • Add them all up and you'll begin to grasp why kids today are getting a flunking grade in conduct on the great report card of public opinion.
    • They know the best ways to smuggle crib sheets, steal exam papers and generally outfox teachers in a bid to gain glowing report cards, whilst doing no real work.
    • Last year, 22.4 million teenagers and young adults traded in their report cards for time cards and worked during the month of July, the traditional summertime peak for youth employment.
    • Still, no matter how good or bad the report card, the vast majority of teenagers plan to honor their moms, and the other important women in their lives, this Mother's Day.
    • Do you care when I got all A's on my report cards for the last two semesters?
    Synonyms
    assessment, evaluation, appraisal
    1. 1.1 An evaluation of performance.
      表现鉴定
      a report card assessing the election promises of the major political parties
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Lorenzo Morris, professor of political science at Howard University, thinks the report card has its greatest impact in a close election.
      • The U.S. House Committee on Government Reform presented its annual cybersecurity report card in February.
      • They're also looking for report cards on physicians and hospitals.
      • Korea's inflation rate is the one blemish on an otherwise solid report card, at least on the macroeconomic front.
      • The Bill might also include a national report card, issued every three years, to determine how effectively America is making use of the older adult population.
      • When the managers scrutinize a salesperson's ‘daily report card,’ the fact that he or she has written lots of sales isn't enough.
      • Next year's cybersecurity report card will demand more from U.S. federal agencies.
      • Any CEO could get a report card of A- and still fail because any one trait could undermine all the others.
      • It's not just the report card - issued each year by a subcommittee of the House Committee on Government Reform - that bugs me.
      • The report card is generated by the House Government Reform Committee's Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the Census.
      • As long as their budget and authority is carved out of IT, this will continue to be a report card that gives the public nightmares.
      • He even asks me several times during my visit, and again after my return, for a report card: ‘How can I be a better manager?’
      • Basically the Feds get to write their own report card every month and they're not exactly loathe to take some liberties in compiling the numbers.
      • The credit report is the grown-up's report card.
      • Financial commentators often point to the muddling, low gold price as to how all is well in the economy and administration officials point to a low gold price with pride, almost using it as a report card on the great job they have done.
      • Admittedly, report cards can become a political tool, but the authors argue that they can be a democratizing tool and facilitate constructive action to improve institutions and organizations.
      • So it may seem odd that I've been eager to get a report card from my employees on the eve of my first year as the editor-in-chief of Fast Company.
      • And it's the organic growth that is the report card on the health of the business.
      • I believe that understanding this concept of Share of Inputs being a report card from customers is one of the most important things for retailers to come to grips with.
      • Since her debut in 2001, the English guitarist and drummer released a string of wildly original albums that were nevertheless marked with the report card tag, ‘not quite living up to her potential.’

Definition of report card in US English:

report card

nounrēˈpôrt kärd
North American
  • 1A teacher's written assessment of a student's work, progress, and conduct, sent home to a parent or guardian.

    〈主北美〉(给家长的)学生成绩报告单

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They know the best ways to smuggle crib sheets, steal exam papers and generally outfox teachers in a bid to gain glowing report cards, whilst doing no real work.
    • Despite Reuven's straight A report card in school, he is lonely and sad.
    • Okafor is a rarity: a true student-athlete, he carried a 3.8 GPA through his Finance major at university and once cried as a boy because he got a ‘B’ on his report card.
    • His grades had dropped dramatically, from A's and B's to C's and D's, even an F on his last report card.
    • Do you care when I got all A's on my report cards for the last two semesters?
    • Add them all up and you'll begin to grasp why kids today are getting a flunking grade in conduct on the great report card of public opinion.
    • George Harrison left school in 1959, a working-class teenager with no qualifications and a report card that stated: ‘I cannot tell you what his work is like because he has not done any.’
    • Show your parents your report card, and make sure it's full of A's.
    • It reversed our feelings of shame about our actual high school report cards.
    • Last year, 22.4 million teenagers and young adults traded in their report cards for time cards and worked during the month of July, the traditional summertime peak for youth employment.
    • Did you know that we get report cards Thursday?
    • Still, no matter how good or bad the report card, the vast majority of teenagers plan to honor their moms, and the other important women in their lives, this Mother's Day.
    • The ‘family’ window includes a framed 1953 picture of Voss' mother with her report card and a picture of his grandmother on her 100th birthday.
    • To assist me in my evaluation, I will employ the circa 1981-88 Fairfax County, Virginia elementary school report card.
    Synonyms
    assessment, evaluation, appraisal
    1. 1.1 An evaluation of performance.
      表现鉴定
      a report card assessing the election promises of the major political parties
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The credit report is the grown-up's report card.
      • It's not just the report card - issued each year by a subcommittee of the House Committee on Government Reform - that bugs me.
      • They're also looking for report cards on physicians and hospitals.
      • When the managers scrutinize a salesperson's ‘daily report card,’ the fact that he or she has written lots of sales isn't enough.
      • Basically the Feds get to write their own report card every month and they're not exactly loathe to take some liberties in compiling the numbers.
      • Financial commentators often point to the muddling, low gold price as to how all is well in the economy and administration officials point to a low gold price with pride, almost using it as a report card on the great job they have done.
      • So it may seem odd that I've been eager to get a report card from my employees on the eve of my first year as the editor-in-chief of Fast Company.
      • Lorenzo Morris, professor of political science at Howard University, thinks the report card has its greatest impact in a close election.
      • The U.S. House Committee on Government Reform presented its annual cybersecurity report card in February.
      • Any CEO could get a report card of A- and still fail because any one trait could undermine all the others.
      • Since her debut in 2001, the English guitarist and drummer released a string of wildly original albums that were nevertheless marked with the report card tag, ‘not quite living up to her potential.’
      • Admittedly, report cards can become a political tool, but the authors argue that they can be a democratizing tool and facilitate constructive action to improve institutions and organizations.
      • I believe that understanding this concept of Share of Inputs being a report card from customers is one of the most important things for retailers to come to grips with.
      • The report card is generated by the House Government Reform Committee's Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the Census.
      • As long as their budget and authority is carved out of IT, this will continue to be a report card that gives the public nightmares.
      • Korea's inflation rate is the one blemish on an otherwise solid report card, at least on the macroeconomic front.
      • And it's the organic growth that is the report card on the health of the business.
      • He even asks me several times during my visit, and again after my return, for a report card: ‘How can I be a better manager?’
      • Next year's cybersecurity report card will demand more from U.S. federal agencies.
      • The Bill might also include a national report card, issued every three years, to determine how effectively America is making use of the older adult population.
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