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try
[ trahy ]
verb (used with object)
- to attempt to do or accomplish:
Try it before you say it's simple.
- to test the effect or result of (often followed by out ):
to try a new method; to try a recipe out.
- to endeavor to evaluate by experiment or experience:
to try a new field; to try a new book.
- to test the quality, value, fitness, accuracy, etc., of:
Will you try a spoonful of this and tell me what you think of it?
- Law. to examine and determine judicially, as a cause; determine judicially the guilt or innocence of (a person).
- to put to a severe test; subject to strain, as of endurance, patience, affliction, or trouble; tax:
to try one's patience.
- to attempt to open (a door, window, etc.) in order to find out whether it is locked:
Try all the doors before leaving.
- to melt down (fat, blubber, etc.) to obtain the oil; render (usually followed by out ).
- Archaic.
- to determine the truth or right of (a quarrel or question) by test or battle (sometimes followed by out ).
- to find to be right by test or experience.
verb (used without object)
- to make an attempt or effort; strive:
Try to complete the examination.
- Nautical. to lie to in heavy weather under just sufficient sail to head into the wind.
noun
- an attempt or effort:
to have a try at something.
- Rugby. a score of three points earned by advancing the ball to or beyond the opponents' goal line.
verb phrase
- to put on an article of clothing in order to judge its appearance and fit:
You can't really tell how it will look until you try it on.
- to compete for (a position, membership, etc.):
Over a hundred boys came to try out for the football team.
- to use experimentally; test:
to try out a new car.
try
/ traɪ /
verb
- whentr, may take an infinitive, sometimes with to replaced by and to make an effort or attempt
he tried to climb a cliff
- troften foll byout to sample, test, or give experimental use to (something) in order to determine its quality, worth, etc
try her cheese flan
- tr to put strain or stress on
he tries my patience
- tr; often passive to give pain, affliction, or vexation to: I have been sorely tried by those children
- to examine and determine the issues involved in (a cause) in a court of law
- to hear evidence in order to determine the guilt or innocence of (an accused)
- to sit as judge at the trial of (an issue or person)
- tr to melt (fat, lard, etc) in order to separate out impurities
- obsolete.trusually foll byout to extract (a material) from an ore, mixture, etc, usually by heat; refine
noun
- an experiment or trial
- an attempt or effort
- rugby the act of an attacking player touching the ball down behind the opposing team's goal line, scoring five or, in Rugby League, four points
- Also calledtry for a point American football an attempt made after a touchdown to score an extra point by kicking a goal or, for two extra points, by running the ball or completing a pass across the opponents' goal line
Usage Note
Usage
Other Words From
- pre·try verb (used with object) pretried pretrying
- re·try verb retried retrying
Word History and Origins
Origin of try1
Word History and Origins
Origin of try1
Idioms and Phrases
- give it the old college try, Informal. to make a sincere effort:
I gave it the old college try and finally found an apartment.
- try it / that on, Chiefly British Informal.
- to put on airs:
She's been trying it on ever since the inheritance came through.
- to be forward or presumptuous, especially with a potential romantic partner:
She avoided him after he'd tried it on with her.
More idioms and phrases containing try
- old college try
- tried
Synonym Study
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Related Words
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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