Sentence examples for all in scope from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "all in scope" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in contexts such as project management or discussions about objectives, indicating that all elements or aspects are included within the defined boundaries.
Example: "The project plan outlines the tasks and deliverables, ensuring that everything is all in scope for successful completion."
Alternatives: "fully included" or "entirely within range".

Exact(1)

The Second Crusade, most impressive of all in scope, ended in failure.

Similar(59)

Specify what is "in scope" and "out of scope".

A quirky combination of spiritual fervor, showbiz glamour, African-American pride and a celebration of women, "Nativity" has been presented in a variety of auditoriums over the past seven years, all the while growing in scope and building an audience, as well as earning the sponsorship of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

The response rate was about 75% (97/129), calculated with the assumption that all the unresolved cases were in-scope (eligible).

"The Twin Rivers rules that were at issue all were reasonable in scope," said Barry S. Goodman, a lawyer for the association.

In the past 15 years of research into semicontinuous systems, studies of the optimal design of these systems have all been limited in scope to small subsets of the parameters, which yields suboptimal and often unsatisfactory results.

These reference species were chosen so that all vertebrate assemblies in scope of RefSeq (and in our dataset) may be evaluated against some close neighbors.

The 92 summary research questions in our shortlist were all fairly general in scope, in contrast to some of the highly specific individual research suggestions received in the initial survey.

Although a number of previous studies of the nutritional content of supermarket ready-meals have been conducted, these have all been limited in scope (Anderson, Wrieden, Tasker, & Gregor, 2008; Celnik et al., 2012; Howard, Adams, & White, 2012).

At a first approximation, nomological determinism (henceforth "determinism"), is a contingent and empirical claim about the laws of nature: that they are deterministic rather than probabilistic, and that they are all-encompassing rather than limited in scope.

There's an overpowering argument for keeping all clinical negligence cases in scope".

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