Scrutiny in a sentence as a noun

But this is law enforcement, subject to all kinds of scrutiny in courts across the US.

People start to be afraid to speak against abuse, those in power stand less for their own scrutiny.

The real issue is that experiments that give "expected" results are not subject to this kind of scrutiny.

But when it's about Facebook, it goes viral, and suddenly is the subject of intense scrutiny.

Four years of punishing travel, endless meetings, unending Wall Street scrutiny.

The over iew and scrutiny failed and failed hard - i have no idea why anyone thought it was acceptable to gather webcam data.

Any story or idea that fills the need to feel different, special, and unique passes through our scrutiny without a second thought.

'Turn on encryption: 'Clearly you have something to hide, and deserve additional scrutiny.

I'm guessing that some of them are making false advertising claims with respect to the chances of landing a job and that is why there is scrutiny here.

Everything is now open to critical scrutiny, and nothing that fails such scrutiny will receive anyone's respect.

If you receive one of these you can be compelled to give evidence or documents in secret, without judicial oversight or public scrutiny.

After Facebook legal complains to Apple about the app perhaps the submitter will be banned and all their apps removed or at least their apps will be under much stricter scrutiny.

As Ken Thompson put it three decades ago, "no amount of source-level verification or scrutiny will protect you from using untrusted code.

It's not culturally unique.> Urban LandscapeThis has some research to back it up - Nisbett, Masuda, Shah, othersOther claims also read as casual inductive observations that don't hold up to much scrutiny.

That investment predates US v Microsoft but at the time it was widely believed that part of Microsoft's motivation was ensuring Apple didn't go completely broke and thus invite even more monopoly scrutiny to the PC business.

Scrutiny definitions

noun

the act of examining something closely (as for mistakes)

See also: examination

noun

a prolonged intense look