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Looking for synonyms for "educate"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
(transitive) To make ready for a specific future purpose; to set up; to assemble or equip; to forearm.
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American and Oxford British standard spelling of civilise.
(transitive) To advance; to further; to promote the growth of.
(n)
Elongated or trailing portion.
To grow plants, notably crops.
(India, Canada, US) An institution dedicated to teaching and learning; an educational institution.
(transitive) To tell (someone) what they must or should do.
(transitive) To teach by repeated instruction.
(uncountable) The process of imparting knowledge, skill and judgment.
(transitive) To communicate knowledge to.
(adj)
(archaic) informative; educational
To acquire, or attempt to acquire knowledge or an ability to do something.
(ditransitive) To pass on knowledge to.
The activity of imparting and acquiring skills.
Things that are or can be known about a given topic; communicable knowledge of something.
Of, or relating to education.
(transitive) To impart or transmit (information or knowledge) to someone; to make known, to tell.
(transitive, ditransitive) To convey by speech; to say.
To make (someone or oneself) aware of some information; to inform, to notify.
(American spelling) Alternative spelling of publicise. [To make widely known to the public.]
(transitive) To begin; to start.
(transitive) To act as someone's mentor.
(transitive) To give advice to; to offer an opinion to, as worthy or expedient to be followed.
(obsolete) Advice.
Instructed; having knowledge of a fact or area of education.
(transitive) To cause a quality to become part of someone's nature.
Australia, Ireland, and UK standard spelling of instill.
(transitive) To give (someone) notice (of some event).
(transitive, followed by with) To furnish or give experimental knowledge of; to make (one) know; to make familiar.
The act by which something is formed; formation.
(transitive) To create.
(transitive) To inquire into or study in order to ascertain facts or information.
(transitive) To make plain, manifest, or intelligible; to clear of obscurity; to illustrate the meaning of.
(ambitransitive) To make or become familiar with something or someone.
(heading, physical) To do with shape.
(transitive, ditransitive) To transport toward somebody/somewhere.
(intransitive, US, Canada, Australia) To ask (about something).
The state or quality of being aware of something.
Alternative spelling of reeducate. [(transitive) To educate or teach again, especially in order to remove bad practices.]
Alternative form of reeducation. [The act of educating again or anew so as to rehabilitate or adapt to new situations.]
To give warning to.
(transitive, nonstandard) To make (someone) aware of something.
(physical) To cause to rise; to lift or elevate.
(intransitive, stative) To perceive sounds through the ear.
The profession of educating people; the activity that a teacher does when he/she teaches.
(transitive) To summarize a recent development to some person with decision-making power.
To advance, increase, augment, make larger, more intense, stronger etc.
(transitive) To engross or hold the attention of; to keep busy or occupied.
(intransitive) To stop sleeping; awake.
(British, New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, Canada) Standard spelling of enroll.
Nurturing; cultivation; providing sustenance and protection for a living thing from conception to maturity.
The raising or training of a child.
Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of familiarize. [(ambitransitive) To make or become familiar with something or someone.]
(transitive) To bring up to maturity, as offspring; to educate; to instruct; to foster.
To make (someone or something) sensitive or responsive to certain stimuli.
The process of making something sensitive.
Made sensitive, especially to some specific agent.
That sensitizes
(British spelling) Alternative spelling of sensitize. [To make (someone or something) sensitive or responsive to certain stimuli.]
(transitive, figurative) To make something clear to (someone); to give knowledge or understanding to.
To nourish or nurse.
One who teaches another (usually called a student, learner, or tutee) in a one-on-one or small-group interaction.
(originally Oxford University slang) A trainer or instructor.
To teach (a person) with a biased, one-sided or uncritical ideology; to brainwash.
(transitive) To create (a hole) by removing material with a drill (tool).
(transitive) To instruct or improve morally or intellectually.
A man who is about to marry.
A controlled behaviour; self-control.
(transitive) To train or educate.
Educated; learned; erudite.
(transitive) To make educational.
Poetic form in general.
An organization founded to promote a cause
A person who learns from another, especially one who then teaches others.
(transitive, archaic) To teach; to instruct.
A section of learning or teaching into which a wider learning content is divided.
(transitive) To train up; educate.
All animals or plants of the same species or subspecies.
(obsolete, transitive) To teach; to indoctrinate.
(transitive) To educate in an entertaining manner.
(transitive) To educate; to instruct; to bring up.
To educate or enlighten a person or people to a perceived higher standard of behaviour.
(transitive) to make suitable for the learning process
Alternative form of tutorize. [(transitive, archaic) To teach; to instruct.]
(transitive, obsolete) To bestow; apply.
An attractive physical attribute; also, physical, mental, or moral strength or vigour.
(transitive) To proclaim by public discourse; to utter in a sermon or a formal religious harangue.
(obsolete) To introduce
Relating to or being a full-time employee.
(transitive) To instruct again or anew.
To indoctrinate.
(archaic) To teach; instruct.
(countable, Christianity) A Christian house of worship; a building where Christian religious services take place.
(chiefly nautical) To tighten; increase in intensity; to become taught.
(transitive) To coach; to instruct.
To educate in an academic discipline.
Pronunciation spelling of inform. [(archaic, transitive) To instruct, train (usually in matters of knowledge).]
(transitive) To draw out or bring forth from some basic or potential state; to elicit, to develop.