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Ascertain

Ascertain is a formal verb meaning to discover or determine something with certainty through investigation or examination. It is transitive and typically takes a direct object such as the facts, the cause, or the identity. It often appears with a clause, as in “ascertain whether…” or “ascertain what….”

Etymology: The term enters English from Middle English ascerteinen, through Old French acertainer, meaning to make

Usage: Used in legal, governmental, scientific, and journalistic writing. It connotes careful verification rather than mere

Derivative forms and examples: Related forms include ascertainable (capable of being ascertained), ascertainment (the act or

certain.
discovery,
and
is
preferred
in
formal
contexts
over
more
casual
terms
like
“find
out.”
process
of
ascertaining),
ascertained
(past
participle),
and
ascertaining
(present
participle).
Examples:
“The
investigators
sought
to
ascertain
the
cause
of
the
failure.”
“This
information
is
not
ascertainable
from
these
records.”
These
variants
help
specify
timing
and
possibility,
as
in
“ascertainable
facts”
or
“ascertained
results.”