From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishevaluatee‧val‧u‧ate /ɪˈvæljueɪt/ ●○○ AWL verb [transitive] JUDGEto judge how good, useful, or successful something is SYN assess You should be able to evaluate your own work. We need to evaluate the success of the campaign. It can be difficult to evaluate the effectiveness of different treatments.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
evaluate• No such margin exists for health care provision, however, much of which has never been scientifically evaluated.• Your work will be evaluated by members of the management team.• Her office has directed department heads to evaluate expenses and hold off spending whenever possible.• The new drug is being evaluated in clinical trials.• There is a growing demand for the development of methodology to evaluate nutrition and dietetic programs.• The police force should not evaluate officers' performance in terms of the number of arrests they make.• Each community has created industry-led committees that can help set policy and evaluate progress.• And setting targets and measuring sticks to evaluate projects would definitely increase efficiency if done properly.• There was not enough time to evaluate the information before the meeting.• This involves planning the intervention and evaluating the outcome.From Longman Business Dictionaryevaluatee‧val‧u‧ate /ɪˈvæljueɪt/ verb [transitive] to carefully consider something to see how useful or valuable it isWe need to evaluate the success of our last marketing campaign. —evaluation noun [countable, uncountable]the development and evaluation of new productsWe need to carry out a proper evaluation of the new system.According to his performance evaluation, his work was always satisfactory.There are many people who think that job evaluation is unnecessary.→ See Verb tableOrigin evaluate (1800-1900) evaluation