[
UK
/ʌntˈiːtʃ/
]
VERB
- cause to disbelieve; teach someone the contrary of what he or she had learned earlier
-
cause to unlearn
teach somebody to unlearn old habits or methods
How To Use unteach In A Sentence
- Is spiking the ball and getting out of bounds an unteachable skill?
- The whole form is like a precisely wrought handmade clock; it depends on timing, rhythm and that unteachable concept called chemistry.
- If a conductor's ultimate unteachable gift is the ability to galvanize an orchestra through body language, eye contact, and an arresting physical presence, this wired-up musician definitely has a major future.
- You can't unteach him, R'shiel, and he's done the Overlord's bidding. HARSHINI
- She then carries this view into her interactions with her students, whom she regards as incorrigible and unteachable.
- ‘There is, I think, in every one of us something mineral and unteachable,’ says an agent of the totalitarian state in a 1990 novel Lights Out in the Reptile House.
- At the same time, art as such, the carrier of spiritual value, was seen as unteachable, a feature of individual genius.
- His gut instinct was his genius. It's absolutely unteachable.
- We've taught them to drink chocolate milk, so we can unteach them that, Cooper said. Schools may ban chocolate milk over added sugar
- They branded him ‘degraded, unteachable, unamiable, querulous, and unmanly.’