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Football Trash Talk · English

How to say “look at the scoreboard” in English

Learn how to say "look at the scoreboard" in English: look at the scoreboard (look at the scoreboard), with pronunciation, usage notes, examples, and related phrases.

Direct answer

English · English-language football banter for rival fan conversations.

rude

look at the scoreboard

Romanization

look at the scoreboard

Pronunciation

look at the skor-bord

When to use it

Use it as playful World Cup match-day banter between rival fans. Keep it about the match, score, tactics, or tournament result; avoid identity-based attacks. In English, this is a sharp football banter line for World Cup match days. Use it with friends or rival fans who are already joking, and keep the joke about the match rather than the person's identity.

Examples

look at the scoreboard

look at the scoreboard

look at the scoreboard

Use it after a goal, VAR call, missed chance, or rival loss.

Common mistakes

Do not translate "look at the scoreboard" word by word; use the full English phrase as a unit.

Use romanization as a pronunciation hint, not as the normal written form.

Check the tone before using it: this version is marked rude.

FAQ

How do you say "look at the scoreboard" in English?

Say look at the scoreboard. The romanization is look at the scoreboard, and the pronunciation is look at the skor-bord.

Is look at the scoreboard formal or casual?

This version is marked rude. In English, this is a sharp football banter line for World Cup match days. Use it with friends or rival fans who are already joking, and keep the joke about the match rather than the person's identity.

When should I use "look at the scoreboard" in English?

Use it as playful World Cup match-day banter between rival fans. Keep it about the match, score, tactics, or tournament result; avoid identity-based attacks. In English, this is a sharp football banter line for World Cup match days. Use it with friends or rival fans who are already joking, and keep the joke about the match rather than the person's identity.

Same phrase in other languages

Related English phrase guides