The AI-powered English dictionary
comparative more learned, superlative most learned
Having much learning, knowledgeable, erudite; highly educated. quotations examples
the learned Merlin, well could tell, / Vnder what coast of heauen the man did dwell […]
1590, Edmund Spenser, “Book III, Canto III”, in The Faerie Queene. […], London: […] [John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie
My learned Brother Cresswell directed the jury to make the calculation […]
1854, Charles Edward Pollock, Lake v. Plaxton, 156 Eng. Rep. 412 (Exch.) 414; 10 Ex. 199, 200 (Eng.)
The book opens with the Time Traveler dining with learned peers in late 1800s England, where he is trying to convince them that he has invented a time machine.
2011 Feb, Jess Lourey, “A Pyramid Approach to Novel Writing”, in Writer, volume 124, number 2, pages 30–32
HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW used to be both the best-known poet in the English-speaking world and the most beloved, adored by the learned and the lowly ...
2011 Spring, Jill Lepore, “How Longfellow Woke the Dead”, in American Scholar, volume 80, number 2, pages 33–46
(law, formal) A courteous description used in various ways to refer to lawyers or judges. examples
Scholarly, exhibiting scholarship. quotations examples
But our limits will not permit us to discuss the many important and curious questions respecting the science of government, to which this learned work invites attention.
1831 March, anonymous author, “The History of the Doric Race”, in The Edinburgh Review, volume LIII, number CV (book review), page 130
(Canada, US and dialectal English) simple past and past participle of learn examples
Derived from experience; acquired by learning. examples