Crossword clues for tests
tests
- Shakedown cruises, e.g
- Screen and stress, for two
- Rorschach, etc
- Reasons for cram sessions
- Proctors' concerns
- International cricket matches
- Hospital battery
- Grade determinants
- Finals, for example
- Clinical studies
- Classroom anxiety producers
- Campus ordeals
- Bases for evaluation
- What the website Tickle is full of
- What the doctor orders
- What teachers mark
- What proctors watch over
- What doctors order
- What ailing rocker undergoes
- What a battery may be made up of
- Uses the double-blind method, say
- Uses a Breathalyzer
- Trials — tribulations
- Trial stages
- Things to run or pass
- They're usually graded
- They're run in hospitals
- They might cause stress for students
- They may make the grade
- They may be taken in batteries
- They have a lot of questions
- Teachers write them
- Takes to the limit, perhaps
- Syllabus entries
- Students' hurdles
- Students study for them
- Students may cram for them
- Student's bugaboos
- Stress and intelligence, e.g
- Source of some students' stress
- Some nuclear explosions
- Some lab procedures
- Some involve inkblots
- Screen ___ for Hollywood hopefuls
- Scientific methods
- School-day hurdles
- Schick et al
- Rorschachs, e.g
- Reasons to bone up
- Puts to proof
- Puts through the paces
- Puts through its paces
- Puts through a dry run
- Proficiency determiners
- Producers of school anxieties
- Proctors' handouts
- Placement determiners, sometimes
- Pilots' experiments
- Performs an assay
- No Child Left Behind mandates
- Midterms, for example
- Medical work-up
- Medical screenings
- Medical battery
- Mechanics' work
- Measures ability in
- Many lab procedures
- LSAT and GMAT, e.g
- Lab trials
- Lab technician's tasks
- Lab studies
- Lab routines
- Lab functions
- Kicks the tires of
- Hospital undertakings
- Hospital bill entries
- Happenings on Monte Bella and Yucca Flat
- Grader's stack
- Grade determiners
- First shows?
- First albums?
- Field trials
- Factors in grades
- End-of-semester alternatives to essays
- Doctors order them
- Doctor's barrage
- Diagnostic battery
- Debut singles?
- Debut albums?
- Composition of some batteries
- Components of some batteries
- Common Core hurdles
- Classroom hurdles
- Class struggle causes?
- Class exams
- Class challenges
- Bloodwork, for example
- Blood and acid, for two
- Battery composition
- Battery components, to a doctor
- Auditions, for instance
- Aptitude questions
- ACT and GED, for two
- Acid and blood, for two
- Academic assessments
- Dick and Schick, e.g.
- Blood and acid, e.g.
- Schick et al.
- Assays
- Exams and such
- Pushes to the limit
- They're held for questioning
- Items often passed
- Dips one's toe in
- They may come in a battery
- Hospital jobs
- Lab works
- They may come in batteries
- Battery components?
- Tempts, in a way
- Midterms and finals
- Hospital bill list
- Feelers
- Hospital work
- Battery elements
- Checks out
- Diagnostics
- Checkups
- Tries out
- Orals, e.g.
- Midterms, e.g.
- Battery units
- Some cricket matches
- Hospital bill items
- Proves the value of
- Activities in 57-Down
- Dry runs, e.g
- Lab jobs
- Trials and tribulations, essentially
- There might be a battery of them
- Quizzes or exams
- -
- Doctor's orders, often
- They sometimes come in batteries
- Big part of one's final grade, typically
- Battery parts?
- Things graded by 7-Down
- Doctors' orders
- Challenges
- Dry runs, e.g.
- Students may pass them
- P.S.A.T.'s
- Criteria
- Probes
- Rorschachs, e.g.
- Checks and probes
- Mettle revealers
- Dick and Schick, e.g
- Experiments with
- Uses litmus paper
- Championship cricket matches
- Mill runs
- Touchstones
- Finals on campus
- Rorschach, etc.
- Acid and rabbit
- Examines
- Examinations
- Samples
- Lab activities
- Tryouts
- Examines balls after dropping second base
- Street set up trial runs
- Screens international games
- Midterm and final
- Battery contents
- Diagnostic aids
- Battery makeup
- Midterms, e.g
- They'll question your knowledge
- Finals, e.g
- Trial balloons
- Reasons to cram
- Orals, e.g
- Lab activity
- Semester enders
- Lab experiments
- Kicks the tires of, so to speak
- Trial runs
- They often make the grade
- Puts a strain on
- Lab procedures
- Critical evaluations
- Blood work, e.g
- Auditions, essentially
- Aptitude determiners
- Some lab work
- Reasons for some performance anxiety
- Proctor's handouts
- Parts of hospital bills, often
- Lab projects
- Finals and midterms
- Auditions, perhaps?
- Things often passed
- They're just what the doctor ordered
- They may come with batteries
- Takes for a spin, perhaps
- Students' concerns
- Some are true/false
- Some are standardized
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Test \Test\, Testa \Tes"ta\, n.; pl. E. Tests, L. Test[ae]. [L. testa a piece of burned clay, a broken piece of earthenware, a shell. See Test a cupel.]
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(Zo["o]l.) The external hard or firm covering of many invertebrate animals.
Note: The test of crustaceans and insects is composed largely of chitin; in mollusks it is composed chiefly of calcium carbonate, and is called the shell.
(Bot.) The outer integument of a seed; the episperm, or spermoderm.
Wiktionary
Wikipedia
Tests (stylized as TESTS) is an album by The Microphones. It was first released as a cassette tape on Knw-Yr-Own in 1998. A CD release by Elsinor followed in the same year, but the track listing was a mixture of The Microphones's three previous albums: Microphone, Wires and Cords, and the Tests cassette.
Tests was re-issued on cassette in an edition of 20 by P.W. ELVERUM & SUN, ltd. The re-issue was to celebrate Record Store Day 2011 and was only available at The Business in Anacortes, WA. A few additional copies were sold online via P.W. ELVERUM & SUN, ltd.
Usage examples of "tests".
Immediately on the passing of the tests, as to the permissibility of any explosive, the facts are reported to the manufacturer and to the various State mine inspectors.
Early in 1904, during the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Congress made provision for tests, demonstrations, and investigations concerning the fuels and structural materials of the United States.
Investigative tests having been made, and the various factors concerning all the explosives on the market having been determined, a circular was sent to all manufacturers of explosives in the United States, on January 9th, 1909, and was also published in the various technical journals, through the associated press, and otherwise.
Director of the United States Geological Survey on January 9, 1909, to the manufacturers of explosives in the United States, setting forth the conditions under which these explosives would be examined and the nature of the tests to which they would be subjected.
No one is to be present at or to participate in these tests except the necessary government officers at the testing station, their assistants, and the representative of the manufacturer of the explosives to be tested.
The tests will be made in the order of the receipt of the applications for them, provided the necessary quantity of the explosive is delivered at the plant by the time assigned, of which due notice will be given by the Geological Survey.
The explosive must be in such condition that the chemical and physical tests do not show any unfavorable results.
The announcement of the passing of like tests by other explosives will be made public immediately after the completion of the tests for such explosives.
Their weaknesses being known, as a result of these tests, the manufacturers were enabled to produce similar, but safer, explosives.
The announcement of the passing of like tests by other explosives will be made public immediately after the completion of the tests.
In addition to investigations as to explosives for use in coal mining, the Explosives Section of the Geological Survey analyzes and tests all such materials, fuses, caps, etc.
Clarence Hall, the engineer in charge of these tests, and Professor C.
The subjects of explosives for blasting in rock, firing machines, blasting machines, and tests thereof, conclude the report.
Clark, Electrical Engineer for Mines, have been furnished the manufacturers for their guidance in perfecting safer fuses, a series of tests of which has been announced.
A series of tests as to the ability of the insulation of electric wiring to withstand the attacks of acid mine waters is in progress, which will lead, it is hoped, to the development of more permanent and cheaper insulation for use in mine wiring.