A Score equals Twenty Years, so 5 x 20 = 100.
The answer to yo
Five score (not scores) years equals 100. One score is 20.
An excellent, famous example of the use of this antiquated usage can be found at the beginining of former U.S. presididetn Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address: "Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."
Considering the fact that the new U.S. President is Barack Obama, this opening, prophetic sentence--actually the whole Address--is especially poignant.
ur question, is that Five Score equals One Hundred Years.
A score is 20 5x20 = 100 years.
A score is 20 years. A decade is 10 years. So in 10 decades we've had 100 years. Thus there are 5 scores in 10 decades. 10 Years/1 Decade x 10 Decades ÷ 20 years/1 score = 5 scores
What makes 3 scores and a ten is 70 years.
A score is defined as 20 years. So it would be 60 years.
It would be 4.5 scores.
Nope - four score and seven years is 87. Which is eight decades.
A score is 20 years. A decade is 10 years. So in 10 decades we've had 100 years. Thus there are 5 scores in 10 decades. 10 Years/1 Decade x 10 Decades ÷ 20 years/1 score = 5 scores
1 score = 20 years2 millenia = 2,000 years = 100 score
Your SAT scores expire after 10 years.
A score is 20 years, so 10 scores is 200 years.
A score is 20 years. A decade is 10 years. So in 10 decades we've had 100 years. Thus there are 5 scores in 10 decades. 10 Years/1 Decade x 10 Decades ÷ 20 years/1 score = 5 scores
10 score years.
5 years
The scores are valid undefinitely, it just depends of who will receive those(some people accepts the copies of your results, others ask for WTS to send those.)In the link:http://www.ets.org/portal/site/ets/menuitem.1488512ecfd5b8849a77b13bc3921509/?vgnextoid=f969af5e44df4010VgnVCM10000022f95190RCRD&vgnextchannel=5296197a484f4010VgnVCM10000022f95190RCRD#ssr3ETS will report your scores until 2 years after test day, and most of the institutions will only take as valid those sent directly from ETS.
A score is defined as 20 years. So it would be 60 years.
GMAT = Scores More than Five Years Old = You may request additional score reports for tests taken up to ten (10) years prior to the day you are making the request. (Please note that scores more than five (5) years old are archived and requests for these scores may require additional processing time and a fee that is in addition to the standard ASR fee.) However, if you have tested within the past five (5) years and have a valid score, we will not report scores more than five (5) years old.
It would be 4.5 scores.
A score is 20, so 200 years would be 10 score years.