ASSAY


Meaning of ASSAY in English

I. ˈaˌsā, aˈsā noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Old North French assai, alteration (influenced by a to, from Latin ad ) of Old French essai — more at at , essay

1.

a. archaic

(1) : trial in order to test : testing

(2) : experiment

(3) : trial , affliction

b. : examination and determination as to characteristics (as weight, measure, or quality)

an assay merely of the technical operations of the poem — American Scholar

assay of the historical role of the individual — Jerome Nathanson

microbiological assay methods — U.S. Dept. Agric. Report on Experiment Stations

under the assay conditions employed — Biological Abstracts

(1) : a chemical test to determine the presence or absence or more often the quantity of one or more components of a material (as an ore, alloy, drug, antibiotic, or dietary substance)

(2) archaic : a testing by taste : tasting

(3) obsolete : the usually complimentary or courteous act of tasting food or drink before offering it to a person

(4) obsolete : testing as to compliance with a standard (as of weights, measures, or foodstuffs)

c. : tested purity, value, or character

of high poetic assay — Roland Gelatt

d.

(1) : a substance to be tested or being tested

the blowpipe test was made on the assay

(2) : the reported result of such testing : measurable quantity

the town always had a fairly high assay of Nazis — Paul Moor

2.

a. archaic : assault , attack

the men … strove vainly at the first assay by dint of climbing on other men's shoulders to storm the platform — Century Magazine

b. obsolete : initial or tentative effort

3.

a. archaic : an effort to accomplish : endeavor , attempt

two brief assays at teaching — Americana Annual

— now rarely used in this sense; compare essay

b. archaic : best effort or maximum exertion

- at all assays

II. aˈsā also ˈaˌsā sometimes əˈsā verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English assayen, from Old North French assayer, from assai

transitive verb

1. : try , attempt , essay

here we have two authors assaying that task once more — Oscar Lewis

has assayed to penetrate a field that by its very nature requires consummate skill — J.W.Chase

2. obsolete : to learn from experience

3. obsolete

a. : to taste (food or drink) before serving (as to a person of rank)

b. : to practice experimentally

c. : to subject to the trial of afflictions or temptations

4.

a. : to analyze (an impure substance or mixture) for one or more valuable components — used especially of determinations in mining, metallurgy, pharmacy, food chemistry

b. : to analyze and judge the significance, worth, or status of

assay a play

assay an event

assay the various intellectual changes which the great reformers within and without the Catholic Church accomplished — J.H.Randall

intransitive verb

: to show or prove to be of a particular nature by means of an assay

the ore assays high in silver

Synonyms: see estimate

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.