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Educated   /ˈɛdʒəkˌeɪtəd/  /ˈɛdʒjukˌeɪtəd/   Listen
Educated

adjective
1.
Possessing an education (especially having more than average knowledge).  Antonym: uneducated.
2.
Characterized by full comprehension of the problem involved.  Synonym: enlightened.  "An enlightened electorate"



Educate

verb
(past & past part. educated; pres. part. educating)
1.
Give an education to.
2.
Create by training and teaching.  Synonyms: develop, prepare, train.  "We develop the leaders for the future"
3.
Teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment.  Synonyms: civilise, civilize, cultivate, school, train.  "Train your tastebuds" , "She is well schooled in poetry"



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"Educated" Quotes from Famous Books



... growing-up family, carefully reared and expensively educated, will often lay clever plans and dream elaborate dreams of a golden future from which it would almost be cruelty to awake him. He sees his pains and toils requited a thousand fold, his disbursements yielding a high rate of interest and the name his ...
— Explanation of Catholic Morals - A Concise, Reasoned, and Popular Exposition of Catholic Morals • John H. Stapleton

... hatred of everything above them; others had taken from Mably his admiration of the ancient republics of Greece and Rome, and would reproduce them in France; others had borrowed from Raynal the revolutionary torch which he had lighted for the destruction of all institutions; others, educated in the atheistic fanaticism of Diderot, trembled with rage at the very name of a priest or religion; and thus the Revolution was gradually handed over to the guidance of passion and ...
— Handbook of Universal Literature - From The Best and Latest Authorities • Anne C. Lynch Botta

... girls of the Fort Wrangel School, who, having read a little notice of Harriet in the "Evangelist," went to work, and by their daily labor raised thirty-seven dollars which they sent to me for Harriet—and this school has been disbanded, and these educated girls have been sent back to their wretched homes, because our Government could not afford to ...
— Harriet, The Moses of Her People • Sarah H. Bradford

... honest dealings with one's employer, and the necessity of industry to keep the world wagging, Nickie' graciously admitted that it was all very true. But when set to clean out the fowl-house he sat on a stone and held converse with an educated cockatoo ...
— The Missing Link • Edward Dyson

... wonderful paragraphs of subtle argumentation from which the great preacher emerged, as triumphantly as Mr. Gladstone from a Gladstonian sentence in a House of Commons debate— what remains of them? Liddon wrote of Stanley that he—Stanley—was "more entirely destitute of the logical faculty" than any educated man he knew. In a sense it was true. But Stanley, if he had been aware of the criticism, might have replied that, if he lacked logic, Liddon lacked something much more vital—i.e., the sense of history—and of ...
— A Writer's Recollections (In Two Volumes), Volume I • Mrs. Humphry Ward


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