try
try (trī)v. tried, (trīd) try·ing, tries (trīz)v. tr. 1. To make an effort to do or accomplish (something); attempt: tried to ski. 2. To taste, sample, or otherwise test in order to determine strength, effect, worth, or desirability: Try this casserole. Try the door. 3. Law. a. To examine or hear (evidence or a case) by judicial process. b. To put (an accused person) on trial. 4. To subject to great strain or hardship; tax: The last steep ascent tried my every muscle. 5. To melt (lard, for example) to separate out impurities; render. 6. To smooth, fit, or align accurately.v. intr. To make an effort; strive.n. pl. tries (trīz) 1. An attempt; an effort. 2. Sports. In Rugby, an act of advancing the ball past the opponent's goal line and grounding it there for a score of three points.Phrasal Verbs:try on 1. To don (a garment) to test its fit. 2. To test or use experimentally.try out 1. To undergo a competitive qualifying test, as for a job or athletic team. 2. To test or use experimentally.Idiom:try (one's) hand To attempt to do something for the first time: I tried my hand at skiing. [Middle English trien, from Old French trier, to pick out, from Vulgar Latin *triāre.] Usage Note: The phrase try and is commonly used as a substitute for try to, as in Could you try and make less noise? A number of grammarians have labeled the construction incorrect. To be sure, the usage is associated with informal style and strikes an inappropriately conversational note in formal writing. Sixty-five percent of the Usage Panel rejects the use in writing of the sentence Why don't you try and see if you can work the problem out between yourselves?
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