endeavour

/enˈdev.ər/ (bre, ipa) · /enˈdev.ɚ/ (ame, ipa) · /ɪnˈdevə(r)/ (bre, ipa) · /ɪnˈdevər/ (ame, ipa)

endeavour — verb

1. to make a serious and determined effort to do something that requires hard work,

1.動詞不及物B2
釋義

to make a serious and determined effort to do something that requires hard work, courage, or persistence.

例句

The engineering team endeavoured to complete the bridge before the rainy season arrived.

endeavour + to-infinitive for formal effort

Christopher endeavoured to learn Japanese by watching films and speaking with native speakers every week.

同義詞
  • try

    less formal and much more common in everyday speech; 'endeavour' sounds more determined and literary

  • attempt

    also formal, but slightly more neutral; 'attempt' can suggest a single effort whereas 'endeavour' often implies sustained effort

  • strive

    overlaps closely but tends to emphasise great effort against difficulty; 'strive' is often used with 'towards'

  • seek

    more indirect — 'seek to do something' means to try to achieve it, but with a sense of aiming rather than labouring

反義詞
  • neglect

    failing to make an effort that could reasonably be expected

  • give up

    stopping the effort rather than persisting

文法句型

endeavour + to-infinitive

用法筆記

Used mainly in formal or written English. In everyday conversation, 'try' or 'attempt' are far more common. Frequently takes a to-infinitive complement; the simple structure 'endeavour + noun' (without 'to') is not grammatical.

常見錯誤

The team endeavoured finishing the project early.
The team endeavoured to finish the project early.
💡'endeavour' must be followed by a to-infinitive, not a gerund.
I will endeavour you to attend the meeting.
I will endeavour to attend the meeting.
💡'endeavour' does not take a direct object; you endeavour TO DO something, not endeavour someone.

endeavour — noun