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 learned ['lә:nid]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 有学问的, 学术上的
learn的过去式和过去分词



    learned
    [ adj ]
    1. established by conditioning or learning

    2. <adj.all>
      a conditioned response
    3. having or showing profound knowledge

    4. <adj.all>
      a learned jurist
      an erudite professor
    5. highly educated; having extensive information or understanding

    6. <adj.all>
      knowing instructors
      a knowledgeable critic
      a knowledgeable audience


    Learn \Learn\ (l[~e]rn), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Learned}
    (l[~e]rnd), or {Learnt} (l[~e]rnt); p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Learning}.] [OE. lernen, leornen, AS. leornian; akin to OS.
    lin[=o]n, for lirn[=o]n, OHG. lirn[=e]n, lern[=e]n, G.
    lernen, fr. the root of AS. l[=ae]ran to teach, OS.
    l[=e]rian, OHG. l[=e]ran, G. lehren, Goth. laisjan, also Goth
    lais I know, leis acquainted (in comp.); all prob. from a
    root meaning, to go, go over, and hence, to learn; cf. AS.
    leoran to go. Cf. {Last} a mold of the foot, {lore}.]
    1. To gain knowledge or information of; to ascertain by
    inquiry, study, or investigation; to receive instruction
    concerning; to fix in the mind; to acquire understanding
    of, or skill; as, to learn the way; to learn a lesson; to
    learn dancing; to learn to skate; to learn the violin; to
    learn the truth about something. ``Learn to do well.''
    --Is. i. 17.

    Now learn a parable of the fig tree. --Matt. xxiv.
    32.

    2. To communicate knowledge to; to teach. [Obs.]

    Hast thou not learned me how
    To make perfumes ? --Shak.

    Note: Learn formerly had also the sense of teach, in
    accordance with the analogy of the French and other
    languages, and hence we find it with this sense in
    Shakespeare, Spenser, and other old writers. This usage
    has now passed away. To learn is to receive
    instruction, and to teach is to give instruction. He
    who is taught learns, not he who teaches.


    Learned \Learn"ed\ (l[~e]rn"[e^]d), a.
    Of or pertaining to learning; possessing, or characterized
    by, learning, esp. scholastic learning; erudite;
    well-informed; as, a learned scholar, writer, or lawyer; a
    learned book; a learned theory.

    The learnedlover lost no time. --Spenser.

    Men of much reading are greatly learned, but may be
    little knowing. --Locke.

    Words of learned length and thundering sound.
    --Goldsmith.

    {The learned}, learned men; men of erudition; scholars. --
    {Learn"ed*ly}, adv. {Learn"ed*ness}, n.

    Every coxcomb swears as learnedly as they. --Swift.

    1. It wasn't until he returned from playing racquetball at 6:30 p.m. EST that Bush learned his nemesis had agreed to leave the Vatican's Panama City embassy and surrender, aides said.
    2. Hoeveler assigned Turnoff to listen to the tapes to avoid being "tainted" by having learned details of Noriega's defense strategy.
    3. But I'm already facing up to the irreversibility of the aging process." Porizkova said she's learned to "sew great curtains, paint, build dollhouses, act and write."
    4. Seas, as the Marines learned during recent exercises along the gulf coast, can experience waves up to 15 feet.
    5. On Friday, 100 passengers refused to board an Avianca plane in Barranquilla when it was learned that a leftist congressmen was going to be aboard with 25 bodyguards.
    6. "There are even candidate members of the Politburo who learned that troops had entered Afghanistan only after reading the newspapers," editor Grigory Baklanov said in a speech last year.
    7. Indeed, the band had learned all the songs on Michael Jackson's "Bad" album, a special favorite of the Princess of Wales, but decided hits like "Dirty Diana" weren't quite right for the occasion.
    8. Her parents were certain that they did not want such a son-in-law. When Perurena finally persuaded Mayte to meet him in a neighbouring village they were seen within minutes. Perurena learned about gamesmanship the hard way.
    9. The steep yield curve tells me that people have learned something," he said.
    10. Argentine officials said they learned Schwammberger arrived in Argentina in 1949 and worked for a chemical company for many years.
    11. When 10 buses from Gainesville pulled up to the Days Inn in suburban Kenner on Friday, nearly 200 of the 600 students learned they didn't have a place to sleep.
    12. So, I have learned, at the very least, to tolerate computer fishing.
    13. Mirza said that when he learned he was being released, "I was happy.
    14. This custom needs to be outlawed in the interests of objectivity and a 'rescue culture'. I hope that the lessons learned from the current spate of avoidable receiverships will be used by the authorities to amend the regime.
    15. O'Toole, who still has pals from those days, one now the assistant editor of the Times of London, learned all phases of newspapering, from pressroom to pub-crawling.
    16. Also, hadn't I learned that when the oil price rose the dollar did too, because people had to pay for oil in dollars?
    17. "The Commies are our slaves now," said one Chinese merchant who learned his colloquial English from American GI customers during the war. "They need us more than we need them." But the change has not completely satisfied the Chinese.
    18. Once the group arrived in Baghdad, Cathell said he learned the PLO leader was in town and broached the possibility of a meeting with the congressional aides.
    19. The terrorists long ago learned the lesson that with hostages in hand, the U.S. political culture will reflexively stand strategy on its head by making any judgments about military engagement subordinate to the hostage issue.
    20. He learned fast, going on to captain the New York University team and play three years in the national championships at Forest Hills.
    21. They apparently learned their eldest son was a suspect at a family gathering Jan. 2, two days before he committed suicide.
    22. When the athletes learned that playing dice was also an easy way to lose money, some turned to armed robbery, the students said.
    23. Officials launched an attack on the garrison after they learned that Batalla and the second hostage, Col. Romeo Abendan, had been slain by the captors.
    24. When he learned that Mr. Morris apparently had created the virus that played hob with computers all over the country, Mr. Friedell says, "I was shocked."
    25. Like other manufacturers, Sony learned in 1988 that the 88000 was only on the drawing board while Mips and Sun had working chips.
    26. Cincinnati Milacron Inc. has learned the hard way that it doesn't always profit to be at the forefront.
    27. Mr. Demme skillfully uses what he learned from Mr. Corman about horror grotesques without injecting a campy feel into this film.
    28. He has learned Spanish in the past few years in his travels but still has an interpreter standing by for his appearances here.
    29. In 1987, the market dropped 508 points in its worst day ever, a stark comeuppance for fresh-faced MBAs who expected to have it all but learned life and their six-figure incomes had limits.
    30. That is why she sleeps with bankers and knows the secret wishes of the Bundesbank. Some of the basic techniques of story-telling still have to be learned, but here at least is a piece that enters new territory.
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