Trial performed, conducted or carried out

atiq124

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a machine trial was done on site to prove the new concept.
what word do we use for trial was 'done' please?
 

emsr2d2

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A machine trial was done on site to prove the new concept.
What word do we use for to say that a trial was 'done' please?
I'd use either "carried out" or possibly "run".

I'm not sure that "prove" is really the right word there.
 

atiq124

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I'd use either "carried out" or possibly "run".

I'm not sure that "prove" is really the right word there.
Please suggest a better word instead of using 'prove' the concept
 

probus

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I can't think of a single-word replacement for prove. If you don't like "prove" you'll have to replace the whole phrase. Instead of prove the concept you could use test the hypothesis or something similar.
 

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I don't know why you can't test a concept.
 

emsr2d2

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Tarheel

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I was referring to post #4.
 

White Hat

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'Performed' and 'substantiate'?
 

emsr2d2

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"Performed a trial run" would work.
We don't "substantiate concepts", though. The word normally collocates with "claim/accusation/allegation".
 

White Hat

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"Performed a trial run" would work.
We don't "substantiate concepts", though. The word normally collocates with "claim/accusation/allegation".
No argument intended, but please take a look at this: "Experiments in the 1950s through the 1970s failed to substantiate this concept." (by Hugh McDevitt). And this: "The first such trial was performed by the Medical Research Council on a new tuberculosis medicine, streptomycin, in 1946." (by the St Andrews TB research group).
 
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jutfrank

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I'd suggest 'performed' or 'conducted'.

I also dislike 'prove' with 'concept' but I can't suggest a better alternative as I don't know what it's supposed to mean.
 

atiq124

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I have heard this terminology many times in the industry, "Let's prove the concept first through trials before committing bigger spend"
 

atiq124

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I'd suggest 'performed' or 'conducted'.

I also dislike 'prove' with 'concept' but I can't suggest a better alternative as I don't know what it's supposed to mean.

They used 'carried out' for the word 'trials'.
 
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