evaluate / ɪˈvæl yuˌeɪt /

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evaluate 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

e·val·u·at·ed, e·val·u·at·ing.

  1. to determine or set the value or amount of; appraise: to evaluate property.
  2. to judge or determine the significance, worth, or quality of; assess: to evaluate the results of an experiment.
  3. Mathematics. to determine or calculate the numerical value of.

evaluate 近义词

v. 动词 verb

judge

更多evaluate例句

  1. Without these data, we cannot even evaluate whether any changes in policing reduces racial inequalities in interactions with police.
  2. One very useful tool for evaluating air purifiers is this directory of room air cleaners maintained by AHAM.
  3. The large-scale stage of testing is intended to evaluate the vaccine’s effectiveness and safety.
  4. We are open to looking at and evaluate anything that we think is going to drive long-term shareholder value.
  5. The Chicago-based aerospace giant has been evaluating its workforce as it completes the initial reduction announced earlier this year.
  6. In schools, this meant finding new ways to evaluate students—and hence their teachers.
  7. Because these ingredients are so new, we need new methodologies just to evaluate them.
  8. Now we can set up a scientifically well prepared study to evaluate the transfusions vs. improved care.
  9. DOJ and CDC numbers differ, and conviction rates are harder to evaluate.
  10. When asked to evaluate his own work, Leigh was a little more reticent.
  11. Here again the Committee was not engaged on a fact-finding mission, but was seeking to evaluate the evidence in a broad way.
  12. About the other's narrow hips was slung a belt from which hung pouches and tools the primitive colonist could not evaluate.
  13. They will still have in common certain fundamental morphological features, but it will be difficult to know how to evaluate them.
  14. It is a question of judgment as to how you evaluate a given characteristic.
  15. There were several agent examiners available to evaluate this material.