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trying on

NOUN
  1. putting clothes on to see whether they fit

How To Use trying on In A Sentence

  • The right-leaning, ex-Tory libertarian Quixotean quester Mr Guido Fawkes GuF really has given up trying on quality control. Guido Fawkes: A Conspiracy Behind Every Windmill
  • Trying on sunglasses, I'm surprised by how butch my face is.
  • Remember; you are never forced to buy anything you try on, so don't feel guilty about trying on different threads.
  • I admit to trying one or two of those approaches, but nothing worked for me until I discovered the miraculous effect of organizing and reorganizing my work space.
  • The racing crowds had been in earlier - good for takings but very trying on the patience, apparently - and he seemed glad for a bit of a lock in.
  • After all, for all the while Georges St-Pierre peers down from his pedestal, there's a good chance Penn won't be trying on the crown for size anyway. Elliot Worsell: BJ Penn -- What Next?
  • Then we have the obligatory fashion section, which again, is well laid out and quite fun if you enjoy playing dress up and trying on a different identity every week.
  • On the horizon are immune system treatments — research that Steinman, the Nobel recipient from Rockefeller University in New York, was studying in the lab and trying on his own pancreatic cancer.
  • Ruth and I discovered some interesting things worth trying once our daylight hours start expanding again.
  • As I think of these places I am again delving into their world, trying on their suffering, searching for an understanding of the strengths that allow them to go on, when I, who am blessed beyond the dreams of some of these people, might choose to pitch life and its profound sorrow. A Moment
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