View example sentences and word forms for Scrutinizes.
Scrutinizes meaning
third-person singular simple present indicative of scrutinize
Example sentences (14)
Additionally, this Grid Operations Management Software research report scrutinizes each and every factor of the market to get unbiased data which helps the companies to understand the threats and challenges in front of the business.
But then again, she’s probably grown tired of the games people play and the way social media scrutinizes her every waking move.
The show’s third season, airing now, scrutinizes the business of life coaching.
At another meeting, a longtime caregiver said she scrutinizes even the slightest changes in her husband’s condition, desperate to catch any issues before they require an ambulance ride.
In 2018, it to buy the American money transfer company MoneyGram after the deal failed to win the blessing of a Washington committee that scrutinizes investment transactions for national security risks.
Scrutinizes in-depth market trends as well as key market drivers and restraints.
The I.R.S. scrutinizes companies that use captive insurance, but there may be too many to prosecute.
The specifics of this vision, in which the British “salaryman” scrutinizes Dante, are obviously dated.
Until countries start filling in the details of how they plan to get to net zero, Frédéric Hache, a former investment banker who scrutinizes environmental markets, worries the benefit could wind up existing only on paper.
Facebook meticulously scrutinizes the minutiae of its users’ online lives, and its tracking stretches far beyond the company’s well-known targeted advertisements.
Unlike the FDA, which scrutinizes drugs and medical devices for years before they enter the consumer market, there's no preemptive EPA approval process for chemicals.
All accounts are subject to ongoing monitoring, in which internal bank software scrutinizes transactions and flags for manual inspection those that fall outside certain parameters.
Shulman, p. 443 Similar to other Naturalistic writers, Crane scrutinizes the position of man, who has been isolated not only from society, but also from God and nature.
The Socratic method searches for general, commonly held truths that shape beliefs, and scrutinizes them to determine their consistency with other beliefs.