try

pronunciation

How to pronounce try in British English: UK [traɪ]word uk audio image

How to pronounce try in American English: US [traɪ] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    earnest and conscientious activity intended to do or accomplish something
  • Verb:
    make an effort or attempt
    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
    take a sample of
    examine or hear (evidence or a case) by judicial process
    give pain or trouble to
    test the limits of
    melt (fat, lard, etc.) in order to separate out impurities
    put on a garment in order to see whether it fits and looks nice

Word Origin

try
try: [13] Try originally meant ‘separate, sift out’. It was borrowed from Old French trier ‘separate, sift’, and it has been speculated that this went back to a Vulgar Latin *trītāre, formed from the past participle of Latin terere ‘rub’ (source of English attrition, detritus, trite, etc). The notion of ‘separation’ led via ‘separating out the good’ to ‘examine, test’ and, in the 14th century, ‘attempt’. The derivative trial [16] was borrowed from Anglo-Norman after the sense ‘attempt’ developed for try in English, and so has never wholeheartedly taken over this meaning.=> trial
try (v.)
c. 1300, "examine judiciously, discover by evaluation, test;" mid-14c., "sit in judgment of," also "attempt to do," from Anglo-French trier (13c.), from Old French trier "to pick out, cull" (12c.), from Gallo-Roman *triare, of unknown origin. The ground sense is "separate out (the good) by examination." Sense of "subject to some strain" (of patience, endurance, etc.) is recorded from 1530s. To try on "test the fit of a garment" is from 1690s; to try (something) on for size in the figurative sense is recorded by 1946. Try and instead of try to is recorded from 1680s.
try (n.)
late 15c., "screen for sifting," from try (v.). From 1832 as "an effort, an attempt."

Example

1. Marketers and advertisers try to mimic its creative approach .
2. Now washington may try again .
3. This plan is worth a try .
4. No one is a failure who continues to try .
5. Now , a newly activist doj may try to do the same thing to google .

more: >How to Use "try" with Example Sentences