Learn
Exceptional Expressions For Everyday Events
Schools are about learning—from peers as well as teachers. In class, students learn academic content, but they also learn about social relationships and life skills, such as the need for perseverance to complete tasks successfully.
To learn something is to gain knowledge about that idea or topic. Learning can occur in formal contexts, such as in a set of experiments about photosynthesis, or, informally, as students chat with one another about favorite books.
Many synonyms exist for the verb to learn, as well as numerous idioms and common phrases. There many ways to integrate these into everyday classroom and school events.
Follow-Ups
- Can a person apprentice to become a carpenter? A writer? An actor? A surfer?
- How is absorbing information different from acquiring information?
- When people say they have mastered a subject, does that mean they have learned everything there is to know about it?
The Spanish Connection
Some of the words related to learn have clear Spanish cognates, among them: study/estudio and acquire/adquirir. The word aprender in Spanish is not a cognate for learn. But it does have an English cognate—apprehend. Both Spanish and English words come from the Latin root prehendere that means “to grasp.” The English word apprehend has come to be associated with grasping or taking someone into custody. However, a second meaning of apprehend is “quick to learn or understand.”
Word Changes
- Learn is used only as a verb. Some members of its morphological family, however, are nouns, such as learning. As a noun, learning means knowledge or the acquisition of knowledge.
- In education, there are many compound words that describe students’ learning processes. Some of these are in the illustration.
- The idioms and phrases reveal some of the nuances of words associated with learning. For example, a student who needs only to review previously learned material can “brush up” on the material. A person who spent many hours assembling a model plane, only to end up with extra pieces, “learned the hard way” the importance of reading instructions fully beforehand.