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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Teache

Teache \Teache\ (t[=e]ch), n. [Cf. Amer. Sp. tacha, tacho.] (Sugar Manuf.) Any one of the series of boilers or evaporating pans in which the cane juice is concentrated in making sugar; especially, the last boiler of the series.
--Ure.

Note: The 1890 edition had the following etymology for teache: [Cf. Ir. teaghaim, Gael. teasaich, to heat.]. Presumably a speculation which proved incorrect?

Wiktionary
teache

n. One of the series of boilers in which the cane juice is treated in making sugar; especially, the last boiler of the series. vb. (archaic spelling of teach English)

Usage examples of "teache".

Kabbalah teaches that the Torah--the first five books of the Bible--was given to Moses by the Creator.

Kabbalah teaches that we can bring about the end to every kind of human suffering--even death--and that we can find immense satisfaction and joy in our lives right now.

Kabbalah teaches that a distinction does exist between male and female energies, but that the Creator transcends these gender categories.

Kabbalah teaches that this sharing permeates the natural world-in physical things such as apples and airplanes, as well as in intangibles such as affection, loyalty, and kindness.

Kabbalah teaches that the letters are much more than visual symbols corresponding to specific sounds.

Like space and time, consciousness cannot be seen or touched, but Kabbalah teaches that it contains the same essential elements as our bodies or the chair across the room.

Kabbalah teaches that transformation means becoming a being of giving and sharing.

Kabbalah teaches us and empowers us to integrate the dual aspects of our being that are our legacy from the primordial Vessel by transforming desire to receive for ourselves alone into desire to receive for the purpose of sharing.

Kabbalah teaches that when a sufficient number of people have achieved transformation, a kind of critical mass will be reached and the redemption of the world will be achieved.

Kabbalah teaches that the highest level of striving is for transformation for turning the desire to receive for ourselves alone into the desire to receive for the purpose of sharing.

Even more remarkably, the Light and the Vessel teaches us that our individual experience ultimately hastens the transformation of the universe as a whole.

Kabbalah teaches that we are in this world to transform desire to receive for the self alone into desire to receive for the purpose of sharing, and thereby to achieve oneness with the Creator.

Kabbalah teaches that when even one human being chooses the positive direction, the world as a whole also moves toward the Light.

This supremely important work can take many forms, but Kabbalah explicitly teaches that practical action is at least as worthwhile as piety or righteous observance.

He also ascends back into the Upper Worlds, for Kabbalah teaches that he was in fact the angel Gabriel.