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1 educate
transitive verb1) (bring up) erziehen2) (provide schooling for)he was educated at Eton and Cambridge — er hat seine Ausbildung in Eton und Cambridge erhalten
3) (give intellectual and moral training to) bildeneducate oneself — sich [weiter]bilden
4) (train) schulen [Geist, Körper]; [aus]bilden [Geschmack]educate oneself to do something — sich dazu erziehen, etwas zu tun
* * *['edjukeit](to train and teach: He was educated at a private school.) erziehen- academic.ru/23406/education">education- educational
- educationalist
- educationist* * *edu·cate[ˈeʤʊkeɪt]vt1. (teach knowledge)to be \educated at Oxford in Oxford auf die [o zur] Schule gehenI was \educated in the private school system ich habe Privatschulen besucht2. (enlighten)▪ to \educate sb jdn aufklärento \educate the public die Öffentlichkeit aufklären [o informieren]▪ to \educate sb jdn erziehen* * *['edjʊkeɪt]vt1) (SCH, UNIV) erziehen2) public informierenwe need to educate our children about drugs — wir müssen dafür sorgen, dass unsere Kinder über Drogen Bescheid wissen
* * *1. erziehen, unterrichten, (aus)bilden:educate o.s. sich bilden;he was educated at X er besuchte die (Hoch)Schule in X;she educated her children at the best schools sie schickte ihre Kinder auf die besten Schulena) erziehen (zu)3. verbessern4. Tiere abrichten, dressieren* * *transitive verb1) (bring up) erzieheneducate oneself — sich [weiter]bilden
4) (train) schulen [Geist, Körper]; [aus]bilden [Geschmack]educate oneself to do something — sich dazu erziehen, etwas zu tun
* * *v.ausbilden v.erziehen v.
См. также в других словарях:
educate oneself — index study Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
educate — /ej oo kayt /, v., educated, educating. v.t. 1. to develop the faculties and powers of (a person) by teaching, instruction, or schooling. 2. to qualify by instruction or training for a particular calling, practice, etc.; train: to educate someone … Universalium
educate — To give proper moral, as well as intellectual and physical, instruction. To prepare and fit oneself for any calling or business, or for activity and usefulness in life … Black's law dictionary
educate — To give proper moral, as well as intellectual and physical, instruction. To prepare and fit oneself for any calling or business, or for activity and usefulness in life … Black's law dictionary
study — I verb acquire knowledge, analyze, apply the mind, attend, audit, cerebrate, consider, contemplate, devote oneself to, dissect, do research, educate oneself, examine, excogitate, explore, eye, incumbere, inquire into, inspect, intellectualize,… … Law dictionary
degree — de|gree W1S3 [dıˈgri:] n [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: degré, from Latin gradus step, grade ] 1.) written abbreviation deg. a unit for measuring temperature. It can be shown as a symbol after a number. For example, 70º means 70 degrees… … Dictionary of contemporary English
studied — stud·ied || stÊŒdɪd adj. deliberate, planned; not spontaneous, contrived; learned stud·y || stÊŒdɪ n. learning; field of learning; thorough investigation; report, analysis; room in which reading or studying is done v. learn, educate oneself;… … English contemporary dictionary
studies — n. acquisition of knowledge, course of learning stud·y || stÊŒdɪ n. learning; field of learning; thorough investigation; report, analysis; room in which reading or studying is done v. learn, educate oneself; think about, ponder; examine,… … English contemporary dictionary
study — stud·y || stÊŒdɪ n. learning; field of learning; thorough investigation; report, analysis; room in which reading or studying is done v. learn, educate oneself; think about, ponder; examine, investigate; observe; memorize … English contemporary dictionary
studying — stud·y || stÊŒdɪ n. learning; field of learning; thorough investigation; report, analysis; room in which reading or studying is done v. learn, educate oneself; think about, ponder; examine, investigate; observe; memorize … English contemporary dictionary
to a degree — TO SOME EXTENT, to a certain extent, up to a point. → degree * * * adverb 1. : to a rather large or remarkable extent : in liberal measure : highly, decidedly, exceedingly but in some things she must have been stupid to a degree I.V.Morris a fin … Useful english dictionary