-
1 wijs
wijs1〈de〉2 [melodie] tune3 [taalkunde] mood♦voorbeelden:bij wijze van spreken • so to speak, as it werebij wijze van uitzondering • as an exceptionop de een of andere wijze • one way or anotherop deze/die wijze • 〈 ook〉 like this/thatop generlei/geen enkele wijze • in no wayop enigerlei wijze • in any waywijze van betaling • method of payment2 hij kan geen wijs houden • he sings/plays out of tunewijs houden • keep/sing/play in tuneeen lied zingen op de wijs van de Internationale • sing a song to the tune of the Internationalehij was helemaal van de wijs • he was completely at sea3 〈 van werkwoord〉 de aantonende/aanvoegende/gebiedende wijs • the indicative/subjunctive/imperative (mood)————————wijs21 [verstandig, (veel) wetend] wise2 [kindertaal] [erg leuk, goed] super♦voorbeelden:een wijs man • a wise manben je niet (goed) wijs? • are you mad/crazy?ben je wel wijs? • 〈 ook〉 are you in your right mind?hij is niet wijzer • he doesn't know any betteriemand door schade en schande wijs laten worden • give someone enough rope to hang himselfwees wijs • be smartik werd er niet/geen cent wijzer van • I came away none the wiserik kan er niet wijs uit worden • I can't make head or tail of itje wordt niet wijs uit hem • you can't get anything out of himhij zal wel wijzer wezen • he knows better than thathij zal nooit wijzer worden • he'll never learnde wijste zijn • give in, accept things (as they are)vroeg wijs • precocioushet kind is wijs voor zijn leeftijd • the child is very knowing for its age -
2 door ervaring wijzer worden
door ervaring wijzer wordenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > door ervaring wijzer worden
-
3 leren
leren1〈bijvoeglijk naamwoord; alleen attributief〉1 leather♦voorbeelden:————————leren21 [kundigheid, kennis verwerven (van)] learn ((how) to do)2 [doen inzien] teach♦voorbeelden:een vak leren • learn a tradedat moet je leren eten • that's an acquired tasteiemand leren kennen • get to know someoneop dat gebied kun je nog heel wat van hem leren • he can still teach you a thing or twowe kunnen van hem nog wel iets leren • we still have something to learn from himmet iets leren leven • learn to live with somethingleren lopen • learn to walkhij wil leren schaatsenrijden • he wants to learn (how) to ice-skatehij leert moeilijk/vlot • he's a slow/fast learnersommige mensen leren het nooit • some people just never learniets perfect leren (beheersen) • master somethingdoor ervaring leren • learn by experienceeen mens is nooit te oud om te leren • one is never too old to learnuit die roman leren we dat … • that novel teaches us that …van zijn ervaringen leren • learn from one's experiencesiets al doende leren • pick something up as you go alongiets van buiten/uit het hoofd leren • learn something by heart2 de ervaring leert … • experience teaches …dat zal je leren • that'll teach youik zal je leren (dat arme dier te plagen) • I'll teach you (to tease that poor animal)3 haar kinderen kunnen goed/niet leren • her children are good/no good at schoolvoor dokter leren • study to be a doctorhij heeft weinig geleerd • he's had little (formal) schoolingII 〈 overgankelijk werkwoord〉1 [onderrichten omtrent] teach (something to someone/someone (how) to do something)♦voorbeelden:iemand leren lezen en schrijven • teach someone to read and write2 waar heb jij zo leren vloeken? • where did you pick up such swearwords?hij leert het al aardig • he's beginning to get the hang of it
См. также в других словарях:
learn — W1S1 [lə:n US lə:rn] v past tense and past participle learned or learnt [lə:nt US lə:rnt] especially BrE ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(subject/skill)¦ 2¦(find out)¦ 3¦(remember)¦ 4¦(change your behaviour)¦ 5 somebody has learned their lesson 6 learn (something) the … Dictionary of contemporary English
experience — ex|pe|ri|ence1 W1S1 [ıkˈspıəriəns US ˈspır ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(knowledge/skill)¦ 2¦(knowledge of life)¦ 3¦(something that happens)¦ 4 the black/female/Russian etc experience 5 work experience ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: Latin… … Dictionary of contemporary English
learn — v. 1) (d; intr.) to learn about, of 2) (d; intr.) to learn by (to learn by experience) 3) (D; intr., tr.) to learn from (to learn from experience; she learned everything from me) 4) (E) she is learning to drive 5) (L) we have learned that he has… … Combinatory dictionary
experience — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 knowledge/skill obtained by seeing/doing sth ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, extensive, great, long, vast, wide ▪ limited, little … Collocations dictionary
experience — /əkˈspɪəriəns / (say uhk spearreeuhns), /ɛk / (say ek ) noun 1. a particular instance of personally encountering or undergoing something: a strange experience. 2. the process or fact of personally observing, encountering, or undergoing something …
experience — experienceable, adj. experienceless, adj. /ik spear ee euhns/, n., v., experienced, experiencing. n. 1. a particular instance of personally encountering or undergoing something: My encounter with the bear in the woods was a frightening experience … Universalium
experience — ex•pe•ri•ence [[t]ɪkˈspɪər i əns[/t]] n. v. enced, enc•ing 1) something personally lived through or encountered: a frightening experience[/ex] 2) the observing, encountering, or undergoing of things generally as they occur in the course of time:… … From formal English to slang
learn the hard way — verb To learn by experiencing the consequences of making mistakes. Anyone who tries to cycle will learn the hard way that grazes are painful. Syn: learn from experience … Wiktionary
experience — ex‧pe‧ri‧ence [ɪkˈspɪəriəns ǁ ˈspɪr ] noun [uncountable] 1. knowledge or skill gained from doing a particular job: • He is a high up executive who has years of experience in advising investors • Applicants will normally have at least two years… … Financial and business terms
experience — 1 noun 1 KNOWLEDGE/SKILL (U) knowledge or skill gained while doing a job (+ in): Karl has considerable experience in modern methods of diagnosis. | political/teaching/computing etc experience: The job requires no secretarial experience. |… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
learn — [[t]lɜ͟ː(r)n[/t]] ♦ learns, learning, learned, learnt (American English uses the form learned as the past tense and past participle. British English uses either learned or learnt.) 1) VERB If you learn something, you obtain knowledge or a skill… … English dictionary