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  1. A score in time is two decades or 20 years. The score is a quantitative term, like ‘dozen’ or ‘gross.’ The term is also often used in the Bible. As to how long is a score in the Bible is, Psalm 90:10 has given the correct meaning. Psalm 90:10 states that the life span of as: ‘the days of our years are threescore years and ten.’ If a ...

  2. May 9, 2021 · I suspect that it is mostly Americans that use the "three score and ten years" form, subconsciously paralleling Lincoln's "four score and seven years", while the rest of the world uses the King James translation with the embedded "years".

  3. Oct 26, 2023 · Score derives from the Old Norse skor, meaning notch or incision. Back in the 13th century, shepherds would carve notches into wood to tally their sheep – one notch for each set of 20 sheep added to the flock. This was an easy way to track numbers using manual scores rather than abstract digits.

  4. Nov 6, 2023 · Let‘s recap the math: "Score" means 20 years. "Four score" is 4 x 20 = 80 years. Add in the "seven years". Therefore, four score and seven years = 87 years. So by saying "four score and seven years ago," Lincoln pointed back 87 years from 1863 to America‘s founding in 1776.

  5. Jun 2, 2024 · four score and seven years ago (not comparable) ( idiomatic, often humorous) Used (sometimes sarcastically) to indicate that a past event being mentioned is particularly important: a long time ago; many years ago.

  6. 24. The word score follows the same rule that applies for the words dozen, hundred, thousand and million. When they are used with a number to denote exact quantity, their form doesn't change, e.g. we say two hundred, ten thousand, three dozen, five million.

  7. Score meaning twenty comes from the Anglo-Saxon way of counting sheep (you counted off your sheep by pairs on both hands and then made a notch ('score') on a bit of wood) and was certainly not old fashioned in the 19th century (though Lincoln's actual words were clearly a Biblical allusion).