English | German | Russian | Czech

learned English

Meaning learned meaning

What does learned mean?
Definitions in simple English

learned

If you are learned, then you are highly educated.

learned

(= erudite) having or showing profound knowledge a learned jurist an erudite professor (= knowing, knowledgeable) highly educated; having extensive information or understanding knowing instructors a knowledgeable critic a knowledgeable audience (= conditioned) established by conditioning or learning a conditioned response

Synonyms learned synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as learned?

Topics learned topics

What do people use learned to talk about?

Examples learned examples

How do I use learned in a sentence?

Simple sentences

I learned to live without her.
At the age of six he had learned to use the typewriter and told the teacher that he did not need to learn to write by hand.
All I need to know about life, I learned from a snowman.
The students learned many poems by heart.
We learned that oil floats on water.
We learned Russian instead of French.
I learned a lot from him.
Where has he learned Italian?
Where has she learned Italian?
He who thinks he has learned enough has learned nothing.
Is aggression natural, or is it learned?
Can you remember the first word you learned in English?
Though his stay in Europe was transient, Spenser felt he had learned much more about interactions with other people from traveling than he did at college.
To win his audience, the speaker resorted to using rhetorical techniques he learned from his communication courses.
I learned a lot from you.
I've learned a good deal from you.
He learned the news while reading the newspaper.
It was an advantage having learned Chinese while I was in school.
The students learned this poem by heart.
On the one hand we suffered a heavy loss, but on the other hand we learned a great deal from the experience.
We all learned the poem by heart.
Soon, he learned how to speak English.
I took a cooking class last spring and learned to bake bread.

Movie subtitles

We, we have learned so much from Elder Cunningham, and as our gift to you we wish to present the story of Joseph Smith and the first Mormons.
Yes, yes yes, let's see what these noble Africans have learned.
Aliens we contact will at least have learned to live with themselves peacefully.
Well, I've learned in all my travels all the cities, no matter what size has a hidden gem.
So, what have we learned?
I just have a lot of rage, and I haven't learned to channel it.
With whatever details I've learned.
I learned that after I shot my partner.
You and your daughter both told me that you were together the night of your wife's death, but I've since learned otherwise from Mr. Humphries.
In all my time on Lauren's desk, I learned more than how to answer phones and schedule meetings.
I learned how to speak up for what I want and need.
So I learned to laugh most things off, cause it hurts too much to do anything else.
Caught by the fishermen,.. the whale is bought by the learned Professor Croknuff,.. director of the great Melbourne aquarium.
I spied on him to learned that he has convened suspect people at the house of Gourdan, to plot against the Countess!
I learned everything on my Limousin farm.
That's what I learned.
I learned that with my Mom.
Having learned of your courageous endeavor to visit the land of the Bolsheviks, we are sending you some New York magazines that depict the barbarous state of Russia today.
Do you not feel that these learned doctors are wiser than you?
The flag indicates that praying for the health of the yurta's owner are a lama a learned monk-healer and a collector of taxes for the monastery.
Now that you have learned what you have learned, it would be well for you to return to your own country.
Now that you've learned what you've learned, it would be wise to return to your country.
I'm older than you. and I've learned that nobody can do much without somebody else.
I never learned a trade.
Our learned medico is going to perform one of his operations with an axe.
If there's one thing that I've learned in life, it's to always have a backup.
After this matter, I've only learned one thing. That is, a person like me, simply shouldn't have the extra emotions.
I didn't even know it was here. Well, I've learned in all my travels all the cities, no matter what size has a hidden gem.
I just have a lot of rage, and I haven't learned to channel it. - Why?
I've just learned that you moved to Vienna two months ago and I feel hurt that you didn't let me know.
I learned my lesson last night!
Everything you ever learned, forget! See?
So long I thought maybe the whole world had learned by this time.
Later, I learned she was still going with him.
It's time you learned Joan won't talk to you no matter what name you give.
Perhaps then I should have learned some tricks to hold you with when you begin to get tired of me.
Well, gentlemen. Since that day you saw me last, I have been out in the great world. And I have learned a great deal.
Like yourselves, I studied them a long time. And I learned to know them well.

News and current affairs

I learned this by accident.
There is yet another lesson to be learned.
They will stress that if the lessons of history are not learned, history is bound to repeat itself.
There have been two eras since World War II when policymakers - American policymakers, at least - believed that they had solved the riddle of the business cycle and had learned how to manage a modern industrial or post-industrial economy.
Back then, Ukraine became the focus of global attention, but Ukrainians learned of the disaster much later than the rest of the world.
But if we have learned anything at all from the tragic assassinations of the region's greatest peacemakers, Anwar Sadat and Yitzhak Rabin, it is that the guns do not remain silent for long.
Finally, donor countries must apply the lessons learned in restoring the war-ravaged states of the former Yugoslavia.
The second application of Groucho's question was that citizens of most Communist countries soon learned that the loss of freedom that they suffered was not compensated by greater prosperity or a higher quality of life.
I recently learned something interesting: American international finance economists and American domestically oriented macroeconomists have very different - indeed, opposing - views of the likely consequences of America's huge current-account deficit.
After all, the very success of that attack meant that such limited intervention could never be repeated, because would-be proliferators learned to bury, hide, or duplicate their nascent weapons programs.
To do so would require calling for higher taxes, and that - as George H. W. Bush learned in 1992 - is no way to get re-elected.
Much can be learned from each country's experience and from that of smaller EU member states, but labor market reforms inevitably have a strong national flavor.
What we learned is easily summarized.
To say that someone has learned something is to endorse what they say they have learned as true.
One thing to be learned, if we didn't know this already, is how close racial sensitivities are to the surface of US life, despite the election of a black president.
If we have learned one thing in the development business, it is that real reform cannot be bought with donors' money, let alone with vague promises of money.
I write this in the 88th year of my life, but not because I have learned from experience.
But the past can bring us more than just troubles of this kind. Even on the issue of Yasukuni, there are positive lessons to be learned.
It is up to the chastened nations of Western Europe, which broadly share American values but have learned something about political patience, to rein in the American fantasy of re-making the world in its own image.
The lesson to be learned from Hamilton and the US is that the necessary institutions will not function without a greater degree of moral consensus as well.
To my surprise, it was not WWII that I learned about; rather, I got my first glimpse into the emotions that my own relatives experienced, as they fought and survived the war.
What lessons can be learned from this sorry state of affairs?
Even on the issue of Yasukuni, there are positive lessons to be learned.
On several occasions in the post-WWII period, the US has learned with great pain that there are limits to the effective use of military power.

Are you looking for...?