SPECIMENS
Noun
specimens
plural of specimen
Source: Wiktionary
SPECIMEN
Spec"i*men, n. Etym: [L., fr. specere to look, to behold. See Spy.]
Definition: A part, or small portion, of anything, or one of a number of
things, intended to exhibit the kind and quality of the whole, or of
what is not exhibited; a sample; as, a specimen of a man's
handwriting; a specimen of painting; aspecimen of one's art.
Syn.
– Sample; model; pattern.
– Specimen, Sample. A specimen is a representative of the class of
things to which it belongs; as, a specimen of photography. A sample
is a part of the thing itself, designed to show the quality of the
whole; as, a sample of sugar or of broadcloth. A cabinet of minerals
consists of specimens; if a part be broken off from any one of these,
it is a sample of the mineral to which it belongs. "Several persons
have exhibited specimens of this art before multitudes of beholders."
Addison. "I design this but for a sample of what I hope more fully to
discuss." Woodward.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition