释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024learn•ed /ˈlɜrnɪd for 1, lɜrnd for 2/USA pronunciation adj. - having much knowledge;
scholarly:learned professors. - of a scholarly nature:[before a noun]a learned journal.
- well-informed:very learned in the ways of the world.
- obtained or acquired by experience, study, etc., and not inborn:learned behavior.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024learn•ed (lûr′nid for 1–3; lûrnd for 4),USA pronunciation adj. - having much knowledge;
scholarly; erudite:learned professors. - connected or involved with the pursuit of knowledge, esp. of a scholarly nature:a learned journal.
- of or showing learning or knowledge;
well-informed:learned in the ways of the world. - acquired by experience, study, etc.:learned behavior.
- Middle English lerned. See learn, -ed2 1300–50
learn′ed•ly, adv. learn′ed•ness, n. Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: learned /ˈlɜːnɪd/ adj - having great knowledge or erudition
- involving or characterized by scholarship
- (prenominal) a title applied in referring to a member of the legal profession, esp to a barrister: my learned friend
ˈlearnedly adv ˈlearnedness n WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024learn /lɜrn/USA pronunciation v., learned /lɜrnd/USA pronunciation or learnt/lɜrnt/USA pronunciation learn•ing. v. - to gain or acquire knowledge of or skill in (something) by study, instruction, or experience: [~ + object]to learn a new language.[~ + (how) to + verb]Where did you learn (how) to throw a ball like that?[no object]She learns quickly.
- to become informed of or acquainted with;
find out: [~ + object]to learn the truth.[~ + (that) clause]I learned that he was a sailor only last week.[~ + about/of + object]When did you learn about his past? - to memorize:[~ + object]He learned the poem in ten minutes.
- to gain by experience, exposure to example, or the like:[~ + object]She learned patience from her father.
- Slang Terms[Nonstandard.]to teach:[~ + object + object]learned him a lesson he won't forget.
learn•er, n. [countable] WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024learn (lûrn),USA pronunciation v., learned (lûrnd)USA pronunciation or learnt, learn•ing. v.t. - to acquire knowledge of or skill in by study, instruction, or experience:to learn French; to learn to ski.
- to become informed of or acquainted with;
ascertain:to learn the truth. - to memorize:He learned the poem so he could recite it at the dinner.
- to gain (a habit, mannerism, etc.) by experience, exposure to example, or the like;
acquire:She learned patience from her father. - Computing(of a device or machine, esp. a computer) to perform an analogue of human learning with artificial intelligence.
- Slang Terms[Nonstandard.]to instruct in;
teach. v.i. - to acquire knowledge or skill:to learn rapidly.
- to become informed (usually fol. by of ):to learn of an accident.
- bef. 900; Middle English lernen, Old English leornian to learn, read, ponder (cognate with German lernen); akin to lesan to glean (cognate with German lesen to read). See lear
learn′a•ble, adj. - 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged Learn, ascertain, detect, discover imply adding to one's store of facts. To learn is to add to one's knowledge or information:to learn a language.To ascertain is to verify facts by inquiry or analysis:to ascertain the truth about an event.To detect implies becoming aware of something that had been obscure, secret, or concealed:to detect a flaw in reasoning.To discover is used with objective clauses as a synonym of learn in order to suggest that the new information acquired is surprising to the learner:I discovered that she had been married before.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: learn /lɜːn/ vb (learns, learning, learned /lɜːnd/, learnt)- (when tr, may take a clause as object) to gain knowledge of (something) or acquire skill in (some art or practice)
- (transitive) to commit to memory
- (transitive) to gain by experience, example, etc
- (intr; often followed by of or about) to become informed; know
- not standard to teach
Etymology: Old English leornian; related to Old High German lirnenˈlearnable adj |