C2 noun #1,500 más común 3 min de lectura

assess

To look at something carefully to decide how good or important it is.

Explanation at your level:

At this level, you can think of assess as 'checking.' If you look at a toy to see if it is broken, you are assessing it. It is a way to learn how good something is. You use it when you want to be careful and smart about your choices.

When you assess a situation, you look at all the parts to understand it better. For example, a teacher might assess your English level by asking you questions. It is a very useful word for school and work when you need to show that you are thinking hard about a problem.

Assess is a formal way to say 'evaluate.' We use it when we need to make a judgment based on facts. You might assess the cost of a trip or assess the risks of a new project. It is common in professional emails and reports. Remember: you always assess something, like a situation, a value, or a performance.

Using assess elevates your language from casual to professional. It implies a systematic approach rather than a gut feeling. In academic writing, you are often asked to 'assess the impact' of a historical event. This means you must look at the evidence and draw a logical conclusion. It is more precise than 'think about' or 'look at.'

At the advanced level, assess carries the nuance of objective, analytical rigor. It suggests that the speaker has gathered data, analyzed variables, and reached a reasoned verdict. It is frequently used in policy, medicine, and strategic planning. When you 'assess the viability' of an idea, you are demonstrating critical thinking skills that are highly valued in university and corporate environments.

In a mastery context, assess is deeply rooted in the concept of 'appraisal'—whether that is financial, moral, or intellectual. It bridges the gap between mere observation and authoritative judgment. Literary or high-level academic texts may use it to describe the 'assessment of character' or the 'assessment of a legacy,' where the process is subjective yet framed through a logical, structured lens. It is the hallmark of a speaker who values precision and evidence-based reasoning over conjecture.

Palabra en 30 segundos

  • Assess means to evaluate.
  • It is a formal verb.
  • Always use it with an object.
  • Common in business and school.

When you assess something, you are essentially putting on your detective hat. It is not just a quick glance; it is a thoughtful, structured look at a situation, a person, or an object to figure out what is really going on. Whether you are a teacher looking at a student's work or a mechanic checking your car engine, you are performing an assessment.

Think of it as the difference between 'seeing' and 'observing.' You see the world, but you assess it to make decisions. It is a vital skill in both professional and daily life because it helps us avoid jumping to conclusions. By gathering facts and weighing them against a standard, you turn uncertainty into a clear, actionable judgment.

The word assess has a surprisingly financial history! It comes from the Latin word assidere, which literally means 'to sit by.' In ancient times, tax officials would literally sit next to a property owner to help them calculate how much tax they owed. This 'sitting by' evolved into the act of determining the value of property for taxation purposes.

Over the centuries, the meaning broadened. By the 16th century, it moved away from just being about money and taxes to the more general meaning of 'judging' or 'estimating' any kind of value or quality. It is a classic example of how a very specific, bureaucratic term can grow to become a common tool in our everyday vocabulary for describing any kind of thoughtful evaluation.

You will hear assess used most often in professional or formal settings. It is a 'high-register' word, meaning it sounds more precise than 'check' or 'guess.' Common collocations include assess the situation, assess the impact, and assess the risk.

While you might say 'I checked the damage,' saying 'I assessed the damage' implies you did it in a professional, thorough way. It is the go-to word in business, medicine, and education. If you are writing an essay or a report, use assess to show you have thought deeply about the evidence provided.

While assess itself is a formal verb, it is often part of phrases that act like idioms. 1. Take stock of: To assess one's current situation. 2. Size up: To quickly assess someone's character or ability. 3. Weigh the pros and cons: To assess the benefits and drawbacks. 4. Get the lay of the land: To assess the environment before acting. 5. Read the room: To assess the mood of a group of people.

Assess is a regular verb. Its past tense is assessed and the present participle is assessing. It is almost always a transitive verb, meaning it needs an object: you assess something. You don't just 'assess'; you assess the damage, the risks, or the costs.

Pronunciation-wise, it is /əˈses/ in both British and American English, with the stress firmly on the second syllable. It rhymes with words like recess, confess, obsess, success, and distress. Keep that second syllable strong and clear!

Fun Fact

It started as a way to describe tax collectors sitting next to people!

Pronunciation Guide

UK /əˈses/

Short 'uh' sound followed by stressed 'sess'.

US /əˈses/

Similar to UK, clear 's' sounds.

Common Errors

  • Pronouncing the first 'a' like 'apple'.
  • Missing the double 's'.
  • Putting stress on the first syllable.

Rhymes With

recess confess obsess success distress

Difficulty Rating

Lectura 2/5

Common in news and business

Writing 2/5

Great for formal essays

Speaking 3/5

Sounds professional

Escucha 2/5

Easy to hear

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

look check think

Learn Next

evaluate appraise analyze

Avanzado

scrutinize audit examine

Grammar to Know

Transitive Verbs

Assess requires an object.

Regular Verbs

Assess, assessed, assessed.

Word Stress

Assess (stress on 2nd).

Examples by Level

1

I assess the broken toy.

check

simple SVO

2

She assesses the fruit.

look at

third person s

3

We assess the plan.

think about

plural subject

4

He assesses the cost.

calculate

transitive verb

5

They assess the room.

check

simple present

6

I assess my work.

evaluate

reflexive usage

7

Please assess this.

check this

imperative

8

We assess the time.

estimate

simple SVO

1

The teacher will assess our progress.

2

I need to assess the situation first.

3

They assessed the damage to the car.

4

He is assessing the risk of the climb.

5

We must assess the value of the house.

6

She assessed the candidate's skills.

7

Did you assess the project requirements?

8

The doctor assessed the patient's health.

1

The committee met to assess the impact of the new law.

2

It is difficult to assess the long-term effects of this policy.

3

The insurance company sent someone to assess the damage.

4

We need to assess whether the plan is feasible.

5

He carefully assessed the situation before speaking.

6

The audit was conducted to assess financial compliance.

7

Experts were called in to assess the structural integrity.

8

She assessed the student's performance based on the rubric.

1

The government is assessing the viability of the new infrastructure project.

2

We must assess the potential risks before proceeding with the merger.

3

His role is to assess the quality of the raw materials.

4

The report assesses the current state of the global economy.

5

It is crucial to assess the situation from multiple perspectives.

6

The team assessed the threat and decided to retreat.

7

She was tasked with assessing the training needs of the staff.

8

The study assesses the correlation between sleep and productivity.

1

The historian attempted to assess the legacy of the revolution.

2

We must critically assess the validity of these scientific claims.

3

The panel was invited to assess the artistic merit of the collection.

4

He spent hours assessing the strategic implications of the move.

5

The survey aims to assess public opinion on climate change.

6

The software is designed to assess the efficiency of the workflow.

7

It is impossible to fully assess the consequences of such a decision.

8

They are assessing the moral implications of the new technology.

1

One must carefully assess the nuances of the text to understand its subtext.

2

The philosopher sought to assess the fundamental nature of human consciousness.

3

The critic assessed the performance with a discerning eye.

4

He was asked to assess the geopolitical ramifications of the treaty.

5

The board assessed the CEO's tenure with rigorous scrutiny.

6

The project requires an expert to assess the environmental impact.

7

She assessed the situation with cold, clinical detachment.

8

The assessment of the evidence proved to be the turning point of the trial.

Colocaciones comunes

assess the situation
assess the risk
assess the impact
carefully assess
assess the value
assess the performance
assess the needs
assess the damage
thoroughly assess
assess the viability

Idioms & Expressions

"take stock"

to assess one's situation

After the failure, I needed to take stock.

neutral

"size up"

to assess someone quickly

He sized up his opponent in seconds.

casual

"weigh up"

to assess pros and cons

I am weighing up my options.

neutral

"read the room"

to assess the mood

He failed to read the room during his speech.

casual

"get a feel for"

to assess by experience

I need to get a feel for the new job.

casual

"sum up"

to assess the main points

Can you sum up the situation?

neutral

Easily Confused

assess vs access

Sounds similar.

Access is entry; assess is judgment.

Access the building vs assess the risk.

assess vs asset

Similar spelling.

Asset is a valuable thing; assess is a verb.

He is an asset to the team.

assess vs assess

None.

N/A

N/A

assess vs assess

None.

N/A

N/A

Sentence Patterns

A2

We must assess [object].

We must assess the risk.

B1

It is hard to assess [object].

It is hard to assess the cost.

B1

The goal is to assess [object].

The goal is to assess performance.

B2

He carefully assessed [object].

He carefully assessed the situation.

B2

They were asked to assess [object].

They were asked to assess the damage.

Familia de palabras

Nouns

assessment the act of assessing

Verbs

reassess to assess again

Adjectives

assessable able to be assessed

Relacionado

assessor the person who performs the assessment

How to Use It

frequency

7

Formality Scale

Formal Neutral Casual

Errores comunes

assess to assess
Assess does not take 'to'.
assess for assess
Assess is direct; no preposition needed.
I assessed the situation to be bad. I assessed the situation as bad.
Use 'as' or direct description.
assess of assess
Never use 'of' after assess.
make an assessment of assess
Keep it simple; use the verb.

Tips

💡

Double S Rule

Remember it has two sets of double S.

💡

Professional Tone

Use it in reports to sound smart.

🌍

Academic Context

Assessment is a huge part of school.

💡

Direct Object

Always follow with an object.

💡

Stress the Second

uh-SESS.

💡

No Preposition

Never say 'assess to'.

💡

Tax History

It comes from sitting by taxpayers.

💡

Sentence Building

Practice with 'Assess the X'.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

ASSESS: Always Seek Serious Evaluation, So Stop!

Visual Association

A tax collector sitting next to a person with a notepad.

Word Web

Evaluation Judgment Measurement Analysis

Desafío

Assess your current English skills today.

Origen de la palabra

Latin

Original meaning: To sit by (a judge/tax collector)

Contexto cultural

None, very neutral.

Commonly used in schools (assessment) and business (risk assessment).

Used in many corporate training manuals and educational policies.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

At Work

  • Assess the project
  • Assess the performance
  • Assess the budget

At School

  • Assess the student
  • Assess the essay
  • Assess the progress

In Insurance

  • Assess the damage
  • Assess the claim
  • Assess the value

In Medical

  • Assess the patient
  • Assess the symptoms
  • Assess the condition

Conversation Starters

"How do you assess your progress in English?"

"Why is it important to assess risks?"

"Have you ever had to assess a difficult situation?"

"What is the best way to assess a new idea?"

"Do you think teachers assess students fairly?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a time you had to assess a big decision.

How do you assess your own work?

Why do businesses need to assess their competition?

Write about a situation where you failed to assess the risks.

Preguntas frecuentes

8 preguntas

Yes, it is more formal than 'check'.

Yes, you can assess a person's skills.

Assessment.

A-S-S-E-S-S (double s twice).

Yes, it is regular.

No, assess requires evidence.

It might sound a bit formal for text.

To assess again.

Ponte a prueba

fill blank A1

I need to ___ the damage.

¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta: assess

Assess fits the context of damage.

multiple choice A2

What does assess mean?

¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta: To check

Assess means to check or evaluate.

true false B1

You can 'assess to' a problem.

¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Falso

Assess is a direct verb; no preposition needed.

match pairs B1

Word

Significado

All matched!

Matching synonyms.

sentence order B2

Toca las palabras de abajo para formar la oración
¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta:

Subject-verb-object order.

Puntuación: /5

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