trier

Etymology
From, from and  (equivalent to ).

Noun

 * 1) One who tries; one who makes experiments or examines anything by a test or standard.
 * 2) An instrument used for sampling something.
 * 3) One who tries judicially.
 * 4)  A person appointed by law to try challenges of jurors; a trior.
 * 5)  That which tries or approves; a test.
 * 1)  A person appointed by law to try challenges of jurors; a trior.
 * 2)  That which tries or approves; a test.

Etymology
From, from , of origin.


 * 1) Widely assumed to be derived from, from , the past participle of , with the semantic shift seemingly originating from the Latin set phrase , which can also be found in modern French as . The semantic shift would be proved by the 🇨🇬 cognate , which also features “to sort” as an archaic sense. The cognates 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬, who cannot reflect trītāre (which would have yielded *tridar) must then be considered borrowings from French.
 * 2) Alternatively, from a Gallo-Romance hypothetical *trīō, trīāre, which would make 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬 inherited cognates instead of borrowings. The archaic sense of 🇨🇬 whould thus be due to influence of the French word. Ultimately could be an outcome of a metathetic alteration, undergoing a pretty straightforward semantical shift. In this case the word would be.

Verb

 * 1) to sort, to sort out
 * 2) to grade; to calibrate
 * 1) to grade; to calibrate

Etymology
Disputed; see English.

Verb

 * 1) to choose; to select
 * 2) to sort
 * 3) to find
 * 4) to verify; to make sure of
 * 5)  to try (in court)
 * 6) to pull