0 past simple and past participle of appraise --
1 to examine someone or something in order to judge their qualities, success, or needs: --
The ring was appraised at $40,000.
He coolly appraised the situation, deciding which person would be most likely to succeed.
In cooperation with other professionals, social workers will appraise the individual's needs.
At the end of each teaching practice, trainee teachers are asked to appraise their own performance.
As stressors become more independently appraised, then, one would expect cognitive biases to become more pronounced in determining the effects of stress.
Reviews of existing appraisals were only included if the scope had altered and only technologies additional to those originally appraised were counted.
Options are appraised, rejected or developed, employing simultaneously retrospective and predictive leaps of the imagination.
As mentioned above, research and its outcomes may be appraised for quality and applicability.
This is why we systematically reviewed and appraised the methods by which the learning curve has been addressed during health technology assessment in the past.
Similarly, political rallies back at home provided an occasion for a face-to-face encounter in which representatives' commitment and endeavour could be appraised by their supporters.
I was particularly interested to see how two groups of trainees listened and appraised one pupil's composition.
They appraised and gave meaning to their experiences by comparing themselves against other cancer patients they had met during their journey.