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[ US /ˈɫɝnd, ˈɫɝnɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. highly educated; having extensive information or understanding
    knowing instructors
    a knowledgeable critic
    a knowledgeable audience
  2. established by conditioning or learning
    a conditioned response
  3. having or showing profound knowledge
    an erudite professor
    a learned jurist

How To Use learned In A Sentence

  • It is, we learned, easier to learn to fly a plane than to master touch-typing. Radio review: Fry's English Delight: The Trial Of Qwerty
  • I learned how to negotiate fights between adolescent girls without making it seem like parental interference.
  • It wasn't a bad program; with full profs as teachers, I read a lot and learned a lot.
  • A few nights ago, after viewing one of these, I was quaffing beer in Bombay Peggy's and learned that every one of the four women at the table happened to live on the other side of a river, either the Yukon or the Klondike.
  • I sat for a moment, wondering what on earth Kip would have done to me once he learned - if he did not already know - that it was I who snitched, when something stung the side of my face a bit.
  • Norman Neal Williams had been a transient, they learned, an itinerant vitamin salesman with no known relatives. MORE TALES OF THE CITY
  • I first learned about cassowaries when I was at the School for Field Studies SFS Center for Rainforest Studies in Fall of 1990 as a college student, and was fascinated that they're the only bird that can "scarify" certain rainforest seeds. Archive 2008-07-01
  • I learned to depend on him for practical advice under fire.
  • I am a violent man who has learned not to be violent and regrets his violence. John Lennon 
  • She learned to scramble around and even run sideways, but not forward.
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