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lesson English

Meaning lesson meaning

What does lesson mean?
Definitions in simple English

lesson

A lesson is a time when something is taught. The Math lesson starts at 5:12.

lesson

a unit of instruction he took driving lessons (= moral) the significance of a story or event the moral of the story is to love thy neighbor (= example) punishment intended as a warning to others they decided to make an example of him a task assigned for individual study he did the lesson for today

Synonyms lesson synonyms

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

Topics lesson topics

What do people use lesson to talk about?

Examples lesson examples

How do I use lesson in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Where do you want to go for our first lesson?
So much for today's lesson.
We'll learn the alphabet in this lesson.
Tom paid for German course, he was present at the introductory lesson and he hasn't showed himself there since.
This will teach her a lesson.
We have English lesson every Sunday.
We will deal with that question in the next lesson.
The English lesson started at 8:30.
This lesson is cancelled tomorrow.
Well, time is up. Let's finish the lesson now.
Did you have a piano lesson that day?
Read Lesson 10 from the beginning.
Let's start with Lesson Ten.
Our first lesson today is English.
I went to sleep during the lesson.
We must learn this poem by heart by the next lesson.
Be quiet during the lesson.
This taught me a good lesson.
The lesson of this story is not that reading Shakespeare will help one rise in the business world.
This lesson should be kept in mind.
Keep this lesson in mind.
Learn this lesson by heart.
You will find this lesson easy.
Do you want to see our English lesson?

Movie subtitles

Hey. Cooper Barrett here, once again, with another important life lesson.
And if you weren't so busy trying to teach me some stupid lesson, none of this would have happened.
Oh, I'm gonna teach them a lesson tonight, boy.
Your railroad friend could use a lesson in manners.
Honey Girl, we must have your history lesson.
We'll finish your history lesson, Honey Girl.
Whilst teaching him his lesson, it broke.
Let's repeat the etiquette lesson.
Yes, we could repeat a lesson in in er. petty.
Trying to teach me a lesson in patience, Sir Joseph?
I learned my lesson from your predecessor.
That'll teach him a good lesson.
You need a lesson.
I had to teach them a lesson.
Honey Girl, it's time for your history lesson, dear.
Honey Girl, we'll finish your history lesson.
Now, the first lesson this morning will be.
Let that be a lesson to all of you.
If this is a singing lesson, I'm a ring-tailed monkey.
Now let that be a lesson to you.
Now let that be another lesson.
Now let that be a lesson to you!
Then I can tell the Baron you'll give her the first lesson tomorrow?
Is this part of my riding lesson?
I hope this'll be a lesson to you.
It's a lesson to us all: not to mix with doubtful company on the Sabbath.
Cooper Barrett here, once again, with another important life lesson.
She needed to be taught a lesson, and she got one.
I learned my lesson last night!
Let me give you a lesson in elementary law, Mr. Dunlap.
He needs a lesson, a good lesson.
That's right, a good lesson.
Have you done the potassium lesson?
This is what I think of the lesson. Professor Topaze.
Let this be a lesson to you that Professor Topaze..
I hope this will be a lesson to you!
Let this be a lesson to you.
Lesson time?

News and current affairs

There is yet another lesson to be learned.
The lesson is obvious: the whole is more than the sum of its parts.
The second lesson, and the one most pertinent to Europe now, concerns the crucial role played by the default scenario.
The other lesson is that Turkey and Armenia cannot remain adversaries forever.
But one lesson of modern finance theory is that, in well functioning financial markets, repackaging risks should not make much difference.
The fate of the Kyoto Protocol should be a lesson to all parties involved.
The only clear lesson to emerge from Iran's disputed presidential election is that the country has a vibrant and indeed dynamic civil society.
The final lesson of the shutdown is that political systems of every kind benefit from the addition of women.
But there is a wider lesson.
It appears to have mostly learned its lesson about keeping out of politics, having been drawn into the coup against Mikhail Gorbachev in August, 1991, only to switch sides when young officers and conscripts balked at carrying out orders.
A permanent end to the conflict over Palestine will not be possible until the Palestinian Arabs and their allies become convinced that the failure of colonialism in countries like Algeria and South Africa is not a relevant lesson for them.
Without a nuclear deterrent, his regime was helpless when the US reneged on the deal - a lesson that has not been lost on North Korea.
The second lesson is that the death penalty debate should not absorb all our attention.
Every developed country learned this lesson domestically decades ago, but the world has yet to learn it internationally.
That lesson should have been absorbed and understood, not least by American strategists, long before the Taliban's fall.
The (economically) developed West should consider importing that lesson.
It remains a sobering lesson, one that presents the media in the role of aggressor and violator, in contrast to their normal position as victim.
So the lesson from the recession is clear.
The second lesson, even more obvious, is that reality cannot be changed with a simple public spectacle.
One is a lesson from history: Russia's strategic interests here cannot be ignored.
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.
The lesson from America is that economic growth is no guarantee of wellbeing or political stability.
This should be regarded as a model for the future and a lesson for the present.
Another lesson concerns Africa's failed political leadership.
John Maynard Keynes, an architect of Bretton Woods, believed that the true lesson of the failures of the Depression-era 1930's lay precisely in the character of the large and chaotic 1933 London World Economic Conference.
The lesson that Schroeder drew was to insist that Germany could no longer be taken for granted and would demand a role commensurate to its size and weight.

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