Dictionary
were trials
noun
An opportunity to test something out; a test.
Exact(60)
There were trials.
There were trials, executions and murders.
Then there were trials for treason.
Connor was at acting school and there were trials.
That is just what they were: trials, or attempts upon himself.
While there were trials that accepted patients with diminished liver function, her organ was on the precipice of all-out failure.
Such challenges -- from either Powell or his opposite number as the top official in domestic policy, Paul O'Neill -- were trials that Bush had less and less patience for as the months passed.
Indeed, the courts have shown signs of such overt partisanship, especially but not exclusively those who veer to the right, that even if there were trials, their results would not have common public acceptance.
At the centre of the inquiry were trials of the CNEP ventilator (continuous negative extrathoracic pressure), which expanded babies' lungs to help them breathe without the need for a tube.
Physical pain and incapacity were trials with which Sutcliff herself was horribly familiar: aged two, she contracted Still's disease, a form of arthritis, and for most of her life she used a wheelchair.
There were trials proving 100% accuracy at Reading's training ground in 2008 - trials which Blatter went on to dismiss with fact-mangling belligerency at a Fifa conference in September.
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