A2 verb #397 am häufigsten 2 Min. Lesezeit

examine

To look at something very closely to understand it better.

Explanation at your level:

To examine means to look at something very carefully. You use your eyes to see if something is broken or good. For example, a doctor examines a child to see if they are sick. You can examine a toy to see how it works. It is like a very long look.

When you examine something, you are checking it. You might examine your homework to find mistakes. A teacher might examine your test to give you a grade. It is a useful word when you want to say you are looking for information or checking the condition of an object.

In this level, examine is often used in professional or academic contexts. You might examine a report, examine a theory, or examine a piece of evidence. It implies that you are not just looking, but thinking about what you see. It is a great alternative to the phrase 'take a close look at'.

At this level, you can use examine to describe abstract concepts. We examine the causes of a war, or we examine the implications of a new law. It suggests a systematic approach to discovery. It is more formal than 'check' and more precise than 'investigate'.

Examine is a staple in academic and formal discourse. It denotes a rigorous, analytical process. We examine the validity of an argument or examine the nuances of a literary text. It is often paired with adverbs like 'thoroughly', 'critically', or 'closely'. Using this word shows you are capable of deep, objective analysis.

The usage of examine at the C2 level often touches upon the etymological root of 'weighing' or 'balancing'. One might examine the pros and cons of a philosophical dilemma, or examine the historical context of a political shift. It is a verb of intellectual scrutiny, often used in expert opinions, formal reviews, and high-level research papers where precision is paramount.

Wort in 30 Sekunden

  • Means to look closely.
  • Used in medical, legal, and academic fields.
  • Comes from Latin 'to weigh'.
  • Must be followed by an object.

When you examine something, you are doing much more than just looking at it. You are putting it under a mental or physical microscope to understand its parts, its health, or its hidden secrets.

Think of a detective at a crime scene. They don't just glance at the room; they examine every inch for clues. Whether you are a doctor checking a patient's pulse or a student reviewing your notes before a big test, you are using this word to show deep focus and purpose.

The word examine has a fascinating journey through time. It comes from the Latin word examinare, which meant 'to weigh' or 'to test'.

In ancient times, an examen was actually the tongue of a balance scale. To examine something literally meant to put it on a scale to see if it was the correct weight. Over centuries, the meaning shifted from physical weight to mental 'weight'—testing the truth or quality of ideas and knowledge.

You will hear examine in both casual and professional settings. It is a 'neutral' word, meaning it works just as well in a biology lab as it does in a court of law.

Commonly, we examine evidence, examine patients, or examine a problem. It sounds more professional than 'look at' but less intense than 'scrutinize'. Use it when you want to sound thoughtful and thorough.

While examine is a standard verb, it appears in many contexts. 1. Examine the evidence: To look at facts before making a choice. 2. Under examination: Currently being tested or watched. 3. Self-examination: Looking inward at one's own feelings. 4. Cross-examine: To question a witness in court. 5. Examine one's conscience: To think honestly about your own moral actions.

Examine is a regular verb. The past tense and past participle are examined, and the present participle is examining. It is almost always used as a transitive verb, meaning it needs an object (e.g., 'I examined the book').

Pronunciation is /ɪɡˈzæmɪn/. The stress is on the second syllable. It rhymes with 'determine' (in some accents) or 'hemin'. Focus on the 'z' sound in the middle!

Fun Fact

The 'examen' was the needle on a scale.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ɪɡˈzæmɪn/

Clear 'g' and 'z' sounds.

US /ɪɡˈzæmɪn/

Similar to UK, stress on second syllable.

Common Errors

  • Pronouncing it like 'ex-a-mine' (rhyming with mine)
  • Missing the 'g' sound
  • Putting stress on the first syllable

Rhymes With

determine feminine examine examine examine

Difficulty Rating

Lesen 2/5

Common word

Writing 2/5

Easy to use

Speaking 2/5

Common

Hören 2/5

Common

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

look see check

Learn Next

scrutinize analyze investigate

Fortgeschritten

interrogate probe evaluate

Grammar to Know

Transitive Verbs

I examine it.

Present Participle

Examining data.

Past Tense

I examined it.

Examples by Level

1

The doctor will examine you.

Doctor checks patient

Future tense

2

I examine the bug.

Look closely at bug

Simple present

3

Look and examine.

See and check

Imperative

4

She examines the toy.

She checks the toy

Third person singular

5

We examine the box.

We check the box

Subject-verb agreement

6

He examines the map.

He looks at the map

Third person singular

7

They examine the fruit.

They check the fruit

Simple present

8

I examine my hand.

I look at my hand

Reflexive context

1

I need to examine the document.

2

The mechanic will examine the car engine.

3

Please examine your answers before finishing.

4

The teacher examines the student's work.

5

She examined the painting closely.

6

We must examine the facts.

7

The police examine the scene.

8

He examined the letter for a signature.

1

The committee will examine the proposal.

2

We need to examine the root cause of this issue.

3

The scientist examined the data for patterns.

4

She examined her conscience before deciding.

5

The judge examined the evidence presented.

6

They examined the house for signs of damage.

7

I examined the options available to me.

8

The audit will examine the company's finances.

1

The report examines the impact of climate change.

2

We must critically examine our own biases.

3

The expert examined the antique for authenticity.

4

The study examines how social media affects teens.

5

He examined the situation from every angle.

6

The court will examine the witness's testimony.

7

The board will examine the budget in detail.

8

We need to examine the long-term effects.

1

The inquiry seeks to examine the systemic failures.

2

Scholars continue to examine the nuances of the text.

3

We must examine the premise of this argument.

4

The analysis examines the correlation between variables.

5

He examined the philosophical implications of the choice.

6

The investigation will examine the chain of events.

7

She examined the historical records thoroughly.

8

The paper examines the evolution of the language.

1

The philosopher examines the nature of human existence.

2

We must examine the underlying assumptions of the theory.

3

The critic examines the interplay of light and shadow.

4

The document examines the geopolitical ramifications.

5

Experts will examine the validity of the claim.

6

The study examines the socio-economic factors at play.

7

He examines the intricacies of the legal code.

8

The research examines the intersection of art and science.

Häufige Kollokationen

examine closely
examine evidence
examine a patient
examine a problem
examine the facts
examine the possibility
examine thoroughly
examine critically
examine a case
examine the results

Idioms & Expressions

"under examination"

Being tested or reviewed

The new policy is under examination.

formal

"examine one's conscience"

Think about your moral actions

He had to examine his conscience.

neutral

"cross-examine"

Questioning a witness

The lawyer began to cross-examine.

formal

"examine the small print"

Look at hidden details

Always examine the small print.

neutral

"self-examination"

Looking at your own thoughts

Self-examination is healthy.

neutral

Easily Confused

examine vs Exam

It is the noun form

Exam is a test; examine is the action.

I took an exam; I examined the paper.

examine vs Inspect

They are synonyms

Inspect is often for physical objects.

Inspect the house; examine the theory.

examine vs Analyze

Both imply study

Analyze focuses on parts.

Analyze the data; examine the evidence.

examine vs Investigate

Both imply search

Investigate implies a mystery.

Investigate the crime; examine the facts.

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + examine + object

I examine the data.

A2

Subject + examine + object + adverb

He examined the map closely.

B1

Subject + will + examine + object

We will examine the case.

B2

Subject + have + examined + object

They have examined the evidence.

C1

It + is + important + to + examine

It is important to examine the facts.

Wortfamilie

Nouns

examination The act of examining

Verbs

re-examine To examine again

Adjectives

examinable Able to be tested

Verwandt

exam short form noun

How to Use It

frequency

8

Formality Scale

scrutinize examine check look

Häufige Fehler

Examine to something Examine something
Examine is transitive; it does not take 'to'.
Look examine Examine
Don't use 'look' and 'examine' together.
Examine for Examine
You examine the object, not examine for the object.
Examining to Examining
Again, avoid the preposition 'to' after the verb.
Examine at Examine
You examine the thing directly.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Imagine a scale weighing your thoughts.

💡

Native Speakers

Use it when you want to show you are being thorough.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Used often in detective shows.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

No preposition needed after.

💡

Say It Right

Stress the middle syllable.

💡

Don't Add To

It is not 'examine to'.

💡

Did You Know?

It comes from scale needles.

💡

Study Smart

Use it in your writing today.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Ex-amine: Imagine an 'ex' partner 'examining' your life.

Visual Association

A doctor with a stethoscope.

Word Web

check test inspect analyze

Herausforderung

Examine three items in your room today.

Wortherkunft

Latin

Original meaning: To weigh or test on a balance

Kultureller Kontext

None.

Common in medical, legal, and academic settings.

Sherlock Holmes stories (examining clues)

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Medical

  • examine the patient
  • examine the symptoms
  • examine the injury

Academic

  • examine the evidence
  • examine the theory
  • examine the data

Legal

  • cross-examine the witness
  • examine the documents
  • examine the case

Daily Life

  • examine the product
  • examine the label
  • examine the damage

Conversation Starters

"How do you examine a problem before solving it?"

"Have you ever had a doctor examine you for something serious?"

"Do you prefer to examine details or look at the big picture?"

"Why is it important to examine our own biases?"

"What is the most interesting thing you have ever examined?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a time you had to examine something very closely.

Why do we need to examine our goals regularly?

Write about a situation where you failed to examine the details.

How does examining a situation change your perspective?

Häufig gestellte Fragen

8 Fragen

No, examine is more detailed.

No, it is incorrect.

Examination.

Yes, it is neutral to formal.

ig-ZAM-in.

Yes, especially doctors.

Yes, in academic contexts.

Yes.

Teste dich selbst

fill blank A1

The doctor will ___ the patient.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: examine

Doctors examine patients.

multiple choice A2

What does examine mean?

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: To look closely

It means to look closely.

true false B1

Examine is a noun.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Falsch

It is a verb.

match pairs B1

Word

Bedeutung

All matched!

Synonyms match.

sentence order B2

Tippe auf die Wörter unten, um den Satz zu bilden
Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort:

Subject-verb-object order.

Ergebnis: /5

Related Content

Mehr Education Wörter

abalihood

C1

Beschreibt das Potenzial für den Erwerb von Fähigkeiten, das für Tests benötigt wird.

abcedation

C1

Abcedation refers to the act of teaching, learning, or arranging something in alphabetical order. It is an obscure or technical term used primarily in archival, linguistic, or historical educational contexts to describe systematic organization or initial literacy.

abcognful

C1

An abcognful refers to the maximum amount of abstract cognitive data an individual can consciously process or hold in working memory at one time. It is a specialized term used in psychometric testing to quantify the upper limits of conceptual synthesis and mental agility.

ability

A1

Ability is the physical or mental power or skill needed to do something. It describes what a person is capable of achieving through talent or training.

abspirary

C1

Das beschreibt ein Ziel, das nicht das Hauptziel ist, sondern eher so nebenbei.

abstract

B2

A brief summary of a research paper, thesis, or report that highlights the main points and findings. It is typically found at the beginning of a document to help readers quickly understand the core purpose and results.

abstruse

C1

Describing something that is difficult to understand because it is intellectual, complex, or obscure. It is typically used for subjects, theories, or language that require significant effort or specialized knowledge to grasp.

academic

A2

Relating to schools, colleges, and universities, or connected to studying and thinking rather than practical or technical skills. It is often used to describe subjects like history, math, and science that are studied in an educational setting.

accreditation

B2

Akkreditierung ist die offizielle Bestätigung einer Stelle, dass eine Institution oder ein Programm bestimmte Qualitätsstandards erfüllt. Ein Gütesiegel für Bildung.

acquire

A2

To obtain or get something, such as a physical object, a skill, or knowledge, often through effort or purchase. It is frequently used to describe a gradual process of learning or a formal business transaction.

War das hilfreich?
Noch keine Kommentare. Sei der Erste, der seine Gedanken teilt!