I’ve got some stuff I’d like to try out

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flowersa

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I’ve got some stuff I’d like to try out

Is it has the meaning as here? I read that "try-out has to do with entertainment or sport but I don't know if it fits here ...
the actress had been given her role only as a try-out

It's from a book that I'm reading but I really want to understand its proper meaning so thanks guys for helping me ...

“What do you have in mind?” Gibbs asked his boss.
“I’ve got some stuff I’d like to try out,” Obama said. “I want
to see what the reaction is.” What Obama wanted to try out was an honest-togoodness
stump speech full of sweeping national themes"
 
I’ve got some stuff I’d like to try out

Is it has the meaning as here? I read that "try-out has to do with entertainment or sport but I don't know if it fits here ...
the actress had been given her role only as a try-out

It's from a book that I'm reading but I really want to understand its proper meaning so thanks guys for helping me ...

“What do you have in mind?” Gibbs asked his boss.
“I’ve got some stuff I’d like to try out,” Obama said. “I want
to see what the reaction is.” What Obama wanted to try out was an honest-togoodness
stump speech full of sweeping national themes"
Have a look here: Definition of try-out | Collins English Dictionary
Bear in mind that in your text there is no hyphen between "try" and "out". "Try-out" is a noun. "Try out" is a verb.
 
Hi Bhaisahab thanks for the note - didn't think of that at all :lol: I'll look in your page ...
 
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