- evaluate someone as something
- evaluate someone as somethingto judge someone's performance as something. •
I will have to evaluate you as a new student.
•We must evaluate ourselves as teachers and leaders.
Dictionary of American idioms. 2013.
I will have to evaluate you as a new student.
•We must evaluate ourselves as teachers and leaders.
Dictionary of American idioms. 2013.
evaluate — e‧val‧u‧ate [ɪˈvæljueɪt] verb [transitive] to carefully consider something to see how useful or valuable it is: • We need to evaluate the success of our last marketing campaign. evaluation noun [countable, uncountable] : • the development and… … Financial and business terms
evaluate — [[t]ɪvæ̱ljueɪt[/t]] evaluates, evaluating, evaluated VERB If you evaluate something or someone, you consider them in order to make a judgement about them, for example about how good or bad they are. [V n] They will first send in trained nurses to … English dictionary
size someone/something up — informal Syn: assess, appraise, get the measure of, judge, take stock of, evaluate; Brit.; informal suss out … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
sum someone/something up — 1) that just about sums him up Syn: evaluate, describe, encapsulate, summarize, put in a nutshell 2) he summed up his reasons Syn: summarize, make/give a summary of, precis, outline, recapitulate, re … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
size someone/something up — (informal) ASSESS, appraise, form an estimate of, take the measure of, judge, take stock of, evaluate; Brit. informal suss out. → size … Useful english dictionary
sum someone/something up — 1 one reviewer summed it up as ‘compelling’: EVALUATE, assess, appraise, rate, weigh up, gauge, judge, deem, adjudge, estimate, form an opinion of. 2 he summed up his rea … Useful english dictionary
evaluative — evaluate UK US /ɪˈvæljueɪt/ verb [T] ► to judge the quality, importance, amount, or value of someone or something: evaluate sb on sth »Employees will be evaluated on their performance, attendance, and team skills. evaluate sth s/sb s… … Financial and business terms
Epistemology — (from Greek επιστήμη episteme , knowledge + λόγος , logos ) or theory of knowledge is a branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope (limitations) of knowledge. [Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Volume 3, 1967, Macmillan, Inc.] The term… … Wikipedia
environment — environmental, adj. environmentally, adv. /en vuy reuhn meuhnt, vuy euhrn /, n. 1. the aggregate of surrounding things, conditions, or influences; surroundings; milieu. 2. Ecol. the air, water, minerals, organisms, and all other external factors… … Universalium
term — term1 W1S1 [tə:m US tə:rm] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1 in terms of something 2 in general/practical/financial etc terms 3¦(word)¦ 4¦(period of time)¦ 5¦(school/university)¦ 6¦(end)¦ 7 come to terms with something 8¦(conditions)¦ 9¦(relationship)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
think — [[t]θɪŋk[/t]] v. thought, think•ing, adj. n. 1) to have a conscious mind, capable of reasoning, remembering, and making rational decisions 2) to employ one s mind rationally in evaluating a given situation: Think carefully[/ex] 3) to have a… … From formal English to slang