trialist
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Pronunciation ===
(UK) IPA(key): /ˈtɹaɪəlɪst/
=== Etymology 1 ===
From trial (“three”) + -ist.
==== Noun ====
trialist (plural trialists)
An advocate of trialism, especially with reference to the proposed creation of a state comprising Austria, Hungary, and a Slavic region.
==== Adjective ====
trialist (not comparable)
Involving three elements; especially, pertaining to a potential state comprising Austria, Hungary, and a Slavic region.
=== Etymology 2 ===
From trial (“test; experiment; court proceedings”) + -ist.
==== Noun ====
trialist (plural trialists)
(medicine) A person who takes part in a clinical trial, especially as a researcher.
2001, LeRoy Walters and Tamar Joy Kahn (eds.), Bibliography of Bioethics, Washington, DC: Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Volume 27, p. 48,[1]
The balance of expertise and authority between research subjects and triallists is profoundly changed, raising questions about the limits of voluntarism and differing perspectives on risk—benefit analysis.
2002, Mike Clarke, “The importance of The Cochrane Controlled Trials Register to people doing and interpreting randomised trials” in Lelia Duley and Barbara Farrell (eds.), Clinical Trials, London: BMJ Books, p. 30,[2]
Having completed their trial, the trialists should ensure that they discuss it in the context of a systematic review of related studies.
(business) A person who tries a product for the first time (as opposed to a regular purchaser); a person who participates in the trial of a new product.
1995, Louella Miles, Perfect Marketing, London: Arrow Business, Chapter 8, p. 56,[4]
90 per cent of profit is said to come from repeat purchasers and the rest from triallists
2011, Adrian Slywotzky, Demand, New York: Business Plus, p. 223,[5]
[The groups] included the core audience—subscribers who attend numerous concerts every year for many years; trialists—first-time concertgoers who attend a single performance; the noncommitted—people who attend a couple of concerts in a given year […]
(sports, chiefly UK) An athlete who participates in a trial (competition to select players for a team); a person who enters a dog (especially a sheepdog) in a competition.
1998, John Gordon, Three Sheep and a Dog, Auckland: Reed, Chapter 8, p. 107,[7]
Event I, the long head […] ends with the hold: sheep at a standstill in a 20-metre ring and held there, with the dog and triallist balanced on either side.
2012, Robert Earnshaw, Earnie: My Life at Cardiff City, Bedlinog: Accent, Chapter 4, p. 22,[8]
A [Youth Training Scheme] place would be the first step on the ladder, a contract with the club which would see you move from triallist to employee, someone the club was willing to invest in.
(South Africa) A person standing trial in a court of law, especially one of a group of defendants in a high-profile case.
2006, Christina Scott, Nelson Mandela: A Force for Freedom, New York: Gramercy Books, Chapter 5, p. 71,[10]
Mandela’s fellow treason trialist, the feisty Helen Joseph, was the first person to be placed under house arrest.
===== Alternative forms =====
triallist
===== Derived terms =====
time trialist