assess
/əˈses/ (bre, ipa) · /əˈses/ (ame, ipa) · /ə-ˈses a-/ (ame, mw)
assess — 動詞
1. to look at someone or something carefully so that you can form a clear opinion a
評估;評斷
仔細判斷某事物的程度、價值或品質
to look at someone or something carefully so that you can form a clear opinion about how good, large, serious, or valuable they are.
Doctors are still trying to assess the full extent of Mei-Lin's injuries after the crash.
醫生仍在評估美琳這次車禍受傷的完整程度。
assess + noun: gathering information before judging
The teachers met on Friday to assess how each child had progressed during the term.
老師們週五開會評估每個孩子這學期的學習進步狀況。
assess + wh-clause showing the question being judged
Engineers from the city visited the bridge to assess whether it was safe to reopen.
市府的工程師到橋上勘查,以評估是否能安全重新開放。
Damage to the rice fields was assessed at over five million dollars.
稻田的損失被評估為超過五百萬美元。
Economist Dr. Ramirez told reporters it was too early to assess the long-term effects of the new tax law.
經濟學家Ramirez博士告訴記者,現在要評估這項新稅法的長期影響還太早。
- evaluate
very close in meaning; slightly more formal and common in academic or business reports
- appraise
stresses giving an official value, often to property, art, or job performance
- gauge
less formal; often used for feelings, mood, or hard-to-measure reactions
- weigh up
informal phrasal verb; suggests comparing pros and cons before deciding
文法句型
assess + noun
assess + wh-clause
assess whether/how/what
用法筆記
Subject is usually a person or group with relevant authority or expertise (a doctor, a teacher, an engineer, a committee). Frequently passive when the result is a measured amount: 'be assessed at $5 million'. The wh-clause pattern ('assess how/whether/what…') is far more common than a simple noun object when the question itself matters.