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Memorised Limerick writer's books
Answer for the clue "Memorised Limerick writer's books ", 6 letters:
learnt
Alternative clues for the word learnt
Word definitions for learnt in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. 1 (context British New England AAVE Ireland Australia New Zealand alternative in Canada English) (en-simple past of: learn ) 2 (context UK New England AAVE Ireland Australia New Zealand alternative in Canada English) (past participle of learn English) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ And that granite obelisk is the Bunker Hill Monument which you will have learnt about in school. ▪ By other forms of reproduction an image may be more or less degraded, so that nothing can be learnt from them. ▪ Never an elitist, ...
Usage examples of learnt.
This applies in quite a special degree to the manipulations to which man, led by his death-bound consciousness, has learnt to submit matter in his laboratories.
For speech depends upon an inner, intelligent human activity, which, once learnt, becomes a lasting part of man's being, quite outside the realm of his philosophizing consciousness, and yet forming an indispensable instrument for this consciousness.
Even though this too may have first been learnt through outer observation, yet it remains true that for the discovery of the fact expressed by it - valid for all plane triangles - no outer experience is needed.
Thus the event that gave science its first foundations is an occurrence in man himself of precisely the same character as the one which we have learnt to regard as necessary for building science's new foundations.
A thinking that has learnt to acknowledge the existence of levity must indeed pursue precisely the opposite direction.
This indeed is in accord with the distribution in the organism of the sulphur-salt polarity, as we learnt from our physiological and psychological studies.
Besides this kind of assimilation we have learnt to recognize a higher form which we called 'spiritual assimilation'.
Thus he had learnt from the macro-telluric realm that with decreasing density of the corporeal medium, the blue sky takes on ever deeper tones, while with increasing density of the medium, the yellow of the sunlight passes over into orange and finally red.
Yet in an optics which has learnt to reckon with both darkness and light as generators of colour, the complete spectrum phenomenon includes this colour equally with green.
Ruskin's 'light', however, is what we have learnt with Goethe to call 'colour', whereas that for which we reserve the term 'light' is called by him simply 'force'.
This tells us, in accordance with what we have learnt earlier, that in the two cases there is a different relation of space to the cosmically distant, all-embracing plane.
Since Lord Rayleigh first discussed this matter in the eighties of the last century, physicists have learnt to distinguish between the 'wave-velocity' of the light itself and the velocity of an 'impressed peculiarity', the so-called 'group-velocity', and it has been acknowledged that only the latter has been, and can be, directly measured.
In the preceding chapter we learnt that the earth's field of gravity offers a definite resistance to our visual ray.
In Chapter XII we learnt to distinguish the material happenings at the two poles of the secondary polarity by observing their appearance in the plant as 'sublimation', on the one hand, and 'assimilation' on the other.
After what we have learnt in regard to these three, we may assume that the path leading to this third stage consists in producing a condition of wide-awake, tranquil contemplation in the very region where the I is wont to unfold its highest degree of initiative on the lowest level of consciousness.