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appraise
(redirected from appraises)

   Also found in: Legal 0.04 sec.
ap·praise  (-prz)
tr.v. ap·praised, ap·prais·ing, ap·prais·es
1. To evaluate, especially in an official capacity.
2. To estimate the quality, amount, size, and other features of; judge. See Synonyms at estimate.

[Middle English appreisen, possibly from Old French aprisier, from Late Latin appretire : Latin ad-, ad- + Latin pretium, price; see per-5 in Indo-European roots.]

ap·praising·ly adv.
ap·praisa·ble adj.
ap·praisement n.
ap·praiser n.
ap·praising·ly adv.

appraise
Verb
[-praising, -praised] to assess the worth, value, or quality of [Old French aprisier]
USAGE: Appraise is sometimes wrongly used where apprise is meant: they had been apprised (not appraised) of my arrival.
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Verb1.appraiseappraise - evaluate or estimate the nature, quality, ability, extent, or significance of; "I will have the family jewels appraised by a professional"; "access all the factors when taking a risk"
grade, score, mark - assign a grade or rank to, according to one's evaluation; "grade tests"; "score the SAT essays"; "mark homework"
rate, value - estimate the value of; "How would you rate his chances to become President?"; "Gold was rated highly among the Romans"
pass judgment, evaluate, judge - form a critical opinion of; "I cannot judge some works of modern art"; "How do you evaluate this grant proposal?" "We shouldn't pass judgment on other people"
assess - estimate the value of (property) for taxation; "Our house hasn't been assessed in years"
standardise, standardize - evaluate by comparing with a standard
reassess, reevaluate - revise or renew one's assessment
censor - subject to political, religious, or moral censorship; "This magazine is censored by the government"
praise - express approval of; "The parents praised their children for their academic performance"
2.appraise - consider in a comprehensive way; "He appraised the situation carefully before acting"
analyse, analyze, examine, study, canvass, canvas - consider in detail and subject to an analysis in order to discover essential features or meaning; "analyze a sonnet by Shakespeare"; "analyze the evidence in a criminal trial"; "analyze your real motives"

appraise
verb assess, judge, review, estimate, survey, price, rate, value, evaluate, inspect, gauge, size up (informal) eye up, assay, recce (slang)
USAGE Appraise is sometimes used where apprise is meant: both patients had been fully apprised (not appraised) of the situation. This may well be due to the fact that appraise is considerably more common, and that people therefore tend to associate this meaning mistakenly with a word they know better.
Translations
appraise [əˈpreɪz] vt (= value) → tasar, valorar [+ situation etc]; evaluar
appraise [əˈpreɪz] vt [+ value] → estimer [+ situation etc]; évaluer
appraise [əˈpreɪz] vtbeurteilen
appraise [əˈpreɪz] vt [+ value] → valutare, fare una stima di [+ situation etc]; fare il bilancio di


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Apprehension may translate into stress when an individual interprets or appraises a situation as being more than their psychological resources can adequately handle (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984).
But, then you take [the process] a step further and actually apply for the loan and the lender commits to funding the loan in writing, provided the house appraises out in value.
1 -- color) Homeowners Lynda and Jeff Bell, from left, with series host John Sencio, watch as Tim Luke, right, appraises the Bells' French armchair reproduction on HGTV's ``Cash in the Attic,'' premiering Monday at 8 p.
 
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