educate

IPA: ˈɛdʒʌkeɪt

verb

  • to instruct or train
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Examples of "educate" in Sentences

  • He was educated at the oratory school.
  • He was educated at the gymnasium of Gotha and the University of Jena.
  • In the 1990s the school was used to educate the children of diplomats.
  • The people educated from that school is now brighten the name of school.
  • The word "educate" derives from the Latin educare, understood as "to bring forth, to draw out, to support".
  • Learning about the women who sacrificed so much to give me the right to vote, to work, to lead, to educate is humbling.
  • Mr. Superintendent, why don't you just grow up and demonstrate a little mature wisdom and knowledge, and educate - remember the word educate?
  • In fact our current educational system defies the very word education, because - as Russell Bishop once pointed out to me - educate comes from the Latin meaning "to draw out of," which is the Socratic style of teaching, not "to put into," which is the didactic style of teaching inflicted by our school system.
  • (In fact our current educational system defies the very word education, because - as Russell Bishop once pointed out to me - educate comes from the Latin meaning "to draw out of," which is the Socratic style of teaching, not "to put into," which is the didactic style of teaching inflicted by our school system.)

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