educate

educate
'edjukeit
verb
(to train and teach: He was educated at a private school.) educar, formar
- educational
- educationalist
- educationist

educate vb educar
he was educated in England se educó en Inglaterra
people should be educated about the environment habría que educar a la gente sobre el medio ambiente
El gerundio de educate se escribe educating
educate
tr['edjʊkeɪt]
transitive verb
1 educar, formar
she was educated at a private school se educó en una escuela privada
we must educate people about the environment tenemos que educar a la gente en el medio ambiente
educate ['ɛʤə.keɪt] vt, -cated ; -cating
1) teach: educar, enseñar
2) instruct: formar, educar, instruir
3) inform: informar, concientizar
educate
v.
desbastar v.
educar v.
enseñar v.
formar v.
instruir v.
'edʒəkeɪt, 'edjʊkeɪt
transitive verb
a) (teach, school) educar*

she was educated in France — se educó en Francia

b) (make aware) concientizar* or (Esp) concienciar
['edjʊkeɪt]
VT (=teach) enseñar; (=train) educar, formar; (=provide instruction in) instruir

where were you educated? — ¿dónde cursó sus estudios?

he is being privately educated — cursa estudios en un colegio privado

* * *
['edʒəkeɪt, 'edjʊkeɪt]
transitive verb
a) (teach, school) educar*

she was educated in France — se educó en Francia

b) (make aware) concientizar* or (Esp) concienciar

English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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  • Educate~ — is The Journal of Doctoral Research in Education, published by the Doctoral School at the Institute of Education, University of London. Educate was first published in 2001 in paper form as Educate The London Journal of Doctoral Research in… …   Wikipedia

  • educate — ed u*cate ([e^]d [ u]*k[=a]t), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Educated} ([e^]d [ u]*k[=a] t[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Educating} ([e^]d [ u]*k[=a] t[i^]ng).] [L. educatus, p. p. of educare to bring up a child physically or mentally, to educate, fr. educere… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • educate — (v.) mid 15c., bring up (children), train, from L. educatus, pp. of educare bring up, rear, educate, which is related to educere bring out, lead forth, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + ducere to lead (see DUKE (Cf. duke) (n …   Etymology dictionary

  • educate — I verb brief, bring up, civilize, coach, cultivate, direct, discipline, drill, edify, educare, enlighten, erudire, explain, familiarize, give lessons, guide, implant, inculcate, indoctrinate, inform, initiate, instituere, instruct, interpret,… …   Law dictionary

  • educate — train, discipline, school, *teach, instruct …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • educate — [v] teach information, experience brainwash*, brief, civilize, coach, cultivate, develop, discipline, drill, drum into, edify, enlighten, exercise, explain, foster, improve, indoctrinate, inform, instruct, let in on, mature, nurture, put hip*,… …   New thesaurus

  • educate — ► VERB 1) give intellectual, moral, and social instruction to. 2) give training in or information on a particular subject. DERIVATIVES educable adjective educative adjective educator noun. ORIGIN Latin educare lead out …   English terms dictionary

  • educate — [ej′o͞o kāt΄, ej′əkāt΄] vt. educated, educating [ME educaten < L educatus, pp. of educare, to bring up, rear, or train < educere < e , out + ducere, to lead: see DUCT] 1. to train or develop the knowledge, skill, mind, or character of,… …   English World dictionary

  • educate */*/ — UK [ˈedjʊkeɪt] / US [ˈedʒəˌkeɪt] verb Word forms educate : present tense I/you/we/they educate he/she/it educates present participle educating past tense educated past participle educated Collocations: Someone who teaches students about… …   English dictionary

  • educate — ed|u|cate [ edʒə,keıt ] verb ** transitive often passive to teach someone, usually for several years, especially at a school, college, or university: She was educated at Smith College and Yale Law School. More and more parents are choosing to… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • educate — verb ( cated; cating) Etymology: Middle English, to rear, from Latin educatus, past participle of educare to rear, educate, from educere to lead forth more at educe Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. a. to provide schooling for < chose to… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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