TRY vs EXAMINE: NOUN
- An attempt; an effort.
- In Rugby, an act of advancing the ball past the opponent's goal line and grounding it there for a score of three points.
- The act of trying; a trial; experiment; effort.
- In foot-ball, in the Rugby game, the right to carry the ball in front of the goal and try to kick a goal. When goals are equal, the game is decided by the majority of tries.
- A sieve; riddle; screen.
- Earnest and conscientious activity intended to do or accomplish something
- Examination.
TRY vs EXAMINE: VERB
- Test the limits of
- Give pain or trouble to
- Examine or hear (evidence or a case) by judicial process
- Put to the test, as for its quality, or give experimental use to
- Put on trial or hear a case and sit as the judge at the trial of
- Put on a garment in order to see whether it fits and looks nice
- Take a sample of
- Make an effort or attempt
- Melt (fat, lard, etc.) in order to separate out impurities
- Observe, check out, and look over carefully or inspect
- Question closely
- Question or examine thoroughly and closely
- Consider in detail and subject to an analysis in order to discover essential features or meaning
- Put to the test, as for its quality, or give experimental use to
- To observe or inspect carefully or critically.
- To check the health or condition of something or someone.
- To determine the aptitude, skills or qualifications of someone by subjecting them to an examination.
- To interrogate.
TRY vs EXAMINE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To make an effort; strive.
- To melt (lard, for example) to separate out impurities; render.
- To subject to great strain or hardship; tax.
- To put (an accused person) on trial.
- To conduct the trial of (a legal claim).
- To make an effort to open (a closed door or window).
- To make an effort to do or accomplish (something); attempt.
- To exert strength; to endeavor; to make an effort or an attempt.
- To do; to fare; !
- To taste, sample, or otherwise test in order to determine strength, effect, worth, or desirability.
- N/A
TRY vs EXAMINE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To prove by experiment; to apply a test to, for the purpose of determining the quality; to examine; to prove; to test.
- To purify or refine, as metals; to melt out, and procure in a pure state, as oil, tallow, lard, etc.
- To divide or separate, as one sort from another; to winnow; to sift; to pick out; -- frequently followed by out.
- To observe carefully or critically; inspect.
- To study or analyze.
- To test or check the condition or health of.
- To determine the qualifications, aptitude, or skills of by means of questions or exercises.
- To question formally, as to elicit facts or information; interrogate: : ask.
- To test by any appropriate method; to inspect carefully with a view to discover the real character or state of; to subject to inquiry or inspection of particulars for the purpose of obtaining a fuller insight into the subject of examination, as a material substance, a fact, a reason, a cause, the truth of a statement; to inquire or search into; to explore
- To interrogate as in a judicial proceeding; to try or test by question
TRY vs EXAMINE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To put to the test or proof; subject to experimental treatment, comparison with a standard, or the like, in order to determine the truth, accuracy, power, strength, speed, fitness, or other quality of; test; prove: as, to try weights and measures; to try a new invention; to try conclusions; to try one's patience, or one's luck.
- To use, apply, or practise tentatively; experiment with: as, to try a new remedy; also, to experiment upon; treat tentatively.
- To endeavor experimentally to find out.
- To experience; have knowledge of by experience.
- To undertake; attempt; essay.
- To examine judicially; bring or set before a court with evidence or argument, or both, for a final judicial determination; submit to the examination and decision or sentence of a judicial tribunal: as, to try a case; to try a prisoner.
- To bring to a decision; determine; settle; hence, to decide by combat.
- To bear hardly upon; subject to trials or suffering; afflict: as, the family has been sorely tried.
- To strain: as, to try the eyes.
- Hence— To transude, or ooze out, as sweat: as, the perspiration is trying out of him.
- In angling, to fish again over a pool or stream where the fish have refused to bite before, as with a different cast of flies, from another direction with regard to the wind or sun, etc.: also used transitively: as, to try back the water.
- Nautical, to lie to in a gale under storm-sails so as to keep a ship's bow to the sea.
- To find or show what a person or a thing is; prove by experience; make or hold a trial.
- To exert strength; make an effort; endeavor; attempt: as, to try for a situation.
- To attempt; undertake.
- In joinery, to dress with a trying-plane. See trying-plane.
- To invite; escort.
- To incite to wrong; tempt; solicit.
- Synonyms To seek, essay, strive.
- To separate, as what is good from what is bad; separate by sifting; sift.
- Hence— To select; cull; pick out.
- To ascertain by sifting or examination.
- To separate or reduce by boiling or steaming; render: generally with out: as, to try out lard or blubber.
- To separate (metal) from the ore or dross by melting; refine; assay.
- (idiom) (try (one's) hand) To attempt to do something for the first time.
- (idiom) (try (one's) fortune) To make an effort or take a risk to be successful, especially as a newcomer.
- To interrogate, catechize.
- To try or assay by appropriate methods or tests: as, to examine minerals or chemical compounds.
- To inquire into the qualifications, capabilities, or progress of, by interrogatories: as, to examine the candidates for a degree, or for a license to practise in a profession; to examine applicants for office or employment.
- To subject to legal inquisition; put to question in regard to conduct or to knowledge of facts; interrogate: as, to examine a witness or a suspected or accused person.
- To inspect or survey carefully; look into the state of; scrutinize and compare the parts of; view or observe in all aspects and relations, with the purpose of forming a correct opinion or judgment: as, to examine a ship (to learn whether she is sea-worthy); to examine a composition (for the purpose of correcting its errors).
TRY vs EXAMINE: RELATED WORDS
- Try out, Sample, Stress, Render, Judge, Adjudicate, Hear, Test, Taste, Prove, Endeavor, Examine, Effort, Seek, Attempt
- Reexamine, Explore, Scrutinize, Assess, Investigate, Evaluate, Essay, Try out, Test, Prove, Try, Study, Analyse, Probe, Analyze
TRY vs EXAMINE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Assay, Strain, Sample, Stress, Render, Judge, Adjudicate, Hear, Test, Taste, Prove, Endeavor, Examine, Effort, Seek
- Determine, Reexamine, Explore, Scrutinize, Assess, Investigate, Evaluate, Essay, Test, Prove, Try, Study, Analyse, Probe, Analyze
TRY vs EXAMINE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- And when did they try to kill Quetzalcoatl.
- Try these problems by yourself before pressing play!
- Look this over, I want to try something.
- Try to interest thepatient in a different activity.
- Try entering a name, location, or different words.
- Anyone try to sign up with Selectel recently?
- You can try to get teaching experience, first try getting one year of teaching experience.
- Try to disable UAC or any native firewall or security solution installed on the server and give a try.
- All I can do is try to cut out temptations and try to live a life that pleases Jesus.
- An error occurred, please try again or try an alternate form of payment.
- FDA Warning Letter to examine your documentation practices.
- Examine the temporalis muscles for tenderness or asymmetry.
- Maintain or examine the records of government agencies.
- We will examine further in a later chapter.
- The ICRC visit with prisoners privately, examine www.
- Examine appropriate accident records and previous inspection reports.
- Powers of Official Assignee to examine persons, etc.
- Examine and reconcile many areas where there satisfied.
- CIs were used to examine the treatment effect.
- Clarify, in cases involving intellectual disability or autism, the Agency shall select the expert to examine the child, rather than examine the child itself.
TRY vs EXAMINE: QUESTIONS
- Did Mamata Banerjee try making Momos in Darjeeling?
- Did Charles Dickens try to institutionalize his wife?
- Did the surrealists ever try to simulate psychosis?
- Should college athletes try to land endorsement deals?
- How can Congress try to neutralize new legislation?
- Are your free photosynthesis worksheets worth a try?
- Do pharmaceutical companies try to influence doctors?
- Where can I rent or try or try an electric wheelchair?
- Can a TRY CATCH statement have other nested try catch statements?
- What would make an extra-point try 48-yard try in college football?
- Why do historians examine antique and historical photographs?
- How does the functionalist approach examine social issues?
- Can the prosecution cross-examine a character witness?
- What should strategists examine when considering strategic choice?
- How many joints does Ritchie compression actually examine?
- What have physiologists developed to examine normal function?
- How are media categories selected in axiom examine?
- Why does Foucault not examine historical documents?
- Why should readers examine multiple design typologies?
- Do Asians and Caucasians examine faces differently?