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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Trained

Train \Train\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Trained; p. pr. & vb. n. Training.] [OF. trahiner, tra["i]ner,F. tra[^i]ner, LL. trahinare, trainare, fr. L. trahere to draw. See Trail.]

  1. To draw along; to trail; to drag.

    In hollow cube Training his devilish enginery.
    --Milton.

  2. To draw by persuasion, artifice, or the like; to attract by stratagem; to entice; to allure. [Obs.]

    If but a dozen French Were there in arms, they would be as a call To train ten thousand English to their side.
    --Shak.

    O, train me not, sweet mermaid, with thy note.
    --Shak.

    This feast, I'll gage my life, Is but a plot to train you to your ruin.
    --Ford.

  3. To teach and form by practice; to educate; to exercise; to discipline; as, to train the militia to the manual exercise; to train soldiers to the use of arms.

    Our trained bands, which are the trustiest and most proper strength of a free nation.
    --Milton.

    The warrior horse here bred he's taught to train.
    --Dryden.

  4. To break, tame, and accustom to draw, as oxen.

  5. (Hort.) To lead or direct, and form to a wall or espalier; to form to a proper shape, by bending, lopping, or pruning; as, to train young trees.

    He trained the young branches to the right hand or to the left.
    --Jeffrey.

  6. (Mining) To trace, as a lode or any mineral appearance, to its head.

    To train a gun (Mil. & Naut.), to point it at some object either forward or else abaft the beam, that is, not directly on the side.
    --Totten.

    To train, or To train up, to educate; to teach; to form by instruction or practice; to bring up.

    Train up a child in the way he should go; and when he is old, he will not depart from it.
    --Prov. xxii. 6.

    The first Christians were, by great hardships, trained up for glory.
    --Tillotson.

Wiktionary
trained
  1. Having undergone a course of training (sometimes in combination). v

  2. (en-past of: train)

WordNet
trained
  1. adj. shaped or conditioned or disciplined by training; often used as a combining form; "a trained mind"; "trained pigeons"; "well-trained servants" [ant: untrained]

  2. having acquired necessary skills by e.g. undergoing a course of study; "a trained nurse"; "a trained voice"; "trained manpower"; "psychologically trained workers"

Usage examples of "trained".

We were trained in Hegemony schools, tattooed after taking Hegemony accreditation, and policed both internally and externally, but normals still feared us.

He was still speaking analytically, like a medically trained cancer victim describing his own terminal symptoms.

The several thousand Americans trained in Japanese language and culture during the war in anticipation of being assigned to military-government duties often found themselves sent elsewhere than Japan.

Though these modes can be appropriately used only occasionally, nevertheless they are of great value to the reader, and the voice should be trained to assume them whenever necessary.

So while she claims never to have consciously considered being a decorative note in her own garden, her trained instinct for costuming herself appropriately and becomingly brings about the desirable decorative effect.

We sent word to our faithful artillerists, who trained the gun upon the house.

Himself trained as an artilleryman, he had served as a young officer on the staff of Crown Prince Rupprecht in the First World War.

Heraclius himself, with the skill and patience of a centurion, inculcated the lessons of the school of tactics, and the soldiers were assiduously trained in the use of their weapons, and the exercises and evolutions of the field.

Acting on a trained reflex he had had drummed into him throughout his apprenticeship, he flung up a defensive shield without thinking, a telekinetic barrier against anything solid that might come his way.

After being mustered out of the Home Guard, I worked as a bouncer and blackjack dealer in one of the rougher Nine Tails casinos, served as a bargemaster on the upper reaches of the Kans for two rainy seasons, and then trained as a gardener on some of the Beak estates under the landscape artist Avrol Hume.

The bartender had a big nose, with highly trained and sensitive olfactory capabilities.

They had it all to themselves, and it was filled with things that Bernard liked--inequalities of level, with mossy steps connecting them, rose-trees trained upon old brick walls, horizontal trellises arranged like Italian pergolas, and here and there a towering poplar, looking as if it had survived from some more primitive stage of culture, with its stiff boughs motionless and its leaves forever trembling.

The youths he trained in the exercise of arms, and near his own person: to the damsels he gave a liberal and Roman education, and by bestowing them in marriage on some of his principal officers, gradually introduced between the two nations the closest and most endearing connections.

Sickened, he now realized Blaise was more than merely adventurous, she was an expertly trained pilot as well.

He remembered, from three years before, that Coutzes and Bouzes had been trained in the cavalry tradition.