Scrutinise vs Scrutineer - What's the difference?
scrutinise | scrutineer |
To examine something with great care.
* 2005 , (Plato), Sophist . Translation by Lesley Brown. .
*{{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-03, volume=408, issue=8847, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= To audit accounts etc in order to verify them.
(chiefly, motor racing) to scrutinise; to thoroughly check that an entered car or motorbike, etc, meets the rules.
English agent nouns
As verbs the difference between scrutinise and scrutineer
is that scrutinise is to examine something with great care while scrutineer is to scrutinise; to thoroughly check that an entered car or motorbike, etc, meets the rules.As a noun scrutineer is
a person who scrutinises; a person responsible for scrutineering.scrutinise
English
Alternative forms
* scrutinizeVerb
(scrutinis)- Because his opinions are all over the place, they find it easy to scrutinise them and lay them out;
Boundary problems, passage=Economics is a messy discipline: too fluid to be a science, too rigorous to be an art. Perhaps it is fitting that economists’ most-used metric, gross domestic product (GDP), is a tangle too. GDP measures the total value of output in an economic territory. Its apparent simplicity explains why it is scrutinised down to tenths of a percentage point every month.}}