student asking question

Can't I just say "try", not "try out"?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

To "try" means to attempt something while "try out" means to test the successfulness of something. You could replace "tried out" with "tried" in this case and it would have a similar meaning, although the nuance of "tried" is different from "tried out", since "try out" implies that he practiced different laughs over and over to test if they would work. However, the overall meaning of the sentence would not change if you used "try" instead here. In many cases, "try" and "try out" are almost interchangeable. Ex: She tried out many different instruments before choosing guitar. Ex: She tried many different instruments before choosing guitar. Ex: She tried to learn many different instruments before choosing guitar. If "try" comes right before a verb, you cannot replace it with "try out", as you can see in the last example sentence.

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