Educating

ˈɛdʒʊˌkeɪtɪŋ

verbBeginner🔥Very CommonAction
1 meaning3 questions

Definitions

1

To provide instruction, training, or schooling; to develop the mental or moral faculties of; to inform.

ˈɛdʒʊˌkeɪtɪŋ

verbneutralBeginner
Action

To give intellectual, moral, or social instruction to someone.

The school is committed to educating students from diverse backgrounds.

💡 Simply: Educating is like helping someone learn new things, like teaching them how to read or how to ride a bike. You are making them smarter and better at doing things!

👶 For kids: Helping someone learn new things at school or at home.

More Examples

2

Parents are responsible for educating their children about good manners.

3

The purpose of the museum is to educate visitors about history.

How It's Used

General

"Schools play a vital role in educating children."

Higher Education

"The university is dedicated to educating future leaders."

Synonyms & Antonyms

Antonyms

From Latin *ēdūcāre* 'to lead out, bring up,' from *ē-* 'out' + *dūcere* 'to lead'.

The word 'educate' has been used since the 16th century, evolving from a focus on moral and intellectual training.

Memory tip

Think of 'educating' like training a puppy - you're shaping them with knowledge and guidance.

Word Origin

LanguageLatin
Original meaning

"to lead out, bring up"

educate studentseducate the publiceducate childreneducate someone about

Common misspellings

edjucatingeducaiting

Usage

60%Spoken
40%Written