Cursory
91Percursory — Per*cur so*ry, a. [L. percursor one who runs through, fr. percurrere. See {Percurrent}.] Running over slightly or in haste; cursory. [R.] [1913 Webster] …
92Remark — Re*mark (r? m?rk ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Remarked} ( m?rkt ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Remarking}.] [F. remarquer; pref. re re + marquer to mark, marque a mark, of German origin, akin to E. mark. See {Mark}, v. & n.] 1. To mark in a notable manner; to… …
93Remarked — Remark Re*mark (r? m?rk ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Remarked} ( m?rkt ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Remarking}.] [F. remarquer; pref. re re + marquer to mark, marque a mark, of German origin, akin to E. mark. See {Mark}, v. & n.] 1. To mark in a notable… …
94Remarking — Remark Re*mark (r? m?rk ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Remarked} ( m?rkt ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Remarking}.] [F. remarquer; pref. re re + marquer to mark, marque a mark, of German origin, akin to E. mark. See {Mark}, v. & n.] 1. To mark in a notable… …
95Schediasm — Sche di*asm, n. [Gr. ? an extempore, fr. ? to do offhand, ? sudden, fr. ? near.] Cursory writing on a loose sheet. [R.] [1913 Webster] …
96bird's-eye view — noun Date: 1762 1. a view from a high angle as if seen by a bird in flight 2. an overall or cursory look at something …
97Cook's tour — noun Etymology: Thomas Cook & Son, English travel agency Date: circa 1909 a rapid or cursory survey or review …
98look over — transitive verb Date: 14th century to inspect or examine especially in a cursory way …
99peruse — transitive verb (perused; perusing) Etymology: Middle English, to use up, deal with in sequence, from Latin per thoroughly + Middle English usen to use Date: 1532 1. a. to examine or consider with attention and in detail ; study b. to look over… …
100run-through — noun Date: 1923 a usually cursory reading, summary, or rehearsal …