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[ UK /pˈɛdɐɡˌɒɡ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who educates young people

How To Use pedagogue In A Sentence

  • He was a French pedagogue and historian.
  • My dictionary defines a pedagogue as a pedantic or dogmatic teacher and there is a lot of that about Waters.
  • He was a french historian and pedagogue.
  • Villeroy, whom Henry was wont to call the pedagogue of the council, went about sighing dismally, wishing himself dead, and perpetually ejaculating, "Ho! poor France, how much hast thou still to suffer! Life and Death of John of Barneveld, Advocate of Holland : with a view of the primary causes and movements of the Thirty Years' War — Complete (1609-15)
  • At the time of the first Kinsey study on sexuality, H.L. Mencken wrote, "All that humorless document really proves is (a) that all men lie when they are asked about their adventures in amour, and (b) that pedagogues are singularly naïve and credulous creatures. Dirty talk? New sex survey's surprising stats
  • “So, in what way precisely was Wordsworth a—let me get this right—genealogically confused, de-individualized, empirico-transcendental pedagogue?” The Redleys
  • By appearing to endorse the building of a mosque and Islamic cultural center at the threshold of Ground Zero, Barack Obama has placed himself in the "pedagogue" category. Dominique Moisi: Obama the Pedagogue Versus Sarkozy the Demagogue?
  • As mayor, he was chief pedagogue, urging bogotanos not to run red lights, dump litter or beat their wives, sometimes dressing up as "Super Citizen" in spandex to get the message across.
  • Nature was a great pedagogue, and any social engineering, any mechanical scheme of education, could not replace the accidented and multifaceted influences that, he claimed, made him a poet. An Interview with Harold Bloom
  • This is a very comprehensive and complete set of resource books that could be used by vocalists and vocal pedagogues.
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