At night, one learns his house to prize:-- Why stand you thus, with such astonished eyes?
One's spirits, Sir, are thus not always good, But then onelearns to relish rest and food.
At length, however, she learns to appreciate the joys of friendship and the value of corporate spirit, and develops into a very lovable character.
Mr. Scarth, an inhabitant of this town, learns of the whereabouts of what is alleged to be a valuable gold find.
He studies the plant and the animal as living organisms with work to do in the world, and learns how what they do and their manner of doing it affect their form and structure.
Finally, since close and careful observation is necessary, the child learns that it is unwise to alarm the animal, and thus a better relationship between child life and animal life is fostered.
There is no such happy man on this earth as your landed proprietor, who only learns what is going on in the political world from the columns of his daily paper.
When the head of the police learns that in St. Petersburg, instead of a daily consumption of five thousand casks of brandy, only two thousand are being consumed, he redoubles the patrols.
One learns interesting things through it at times.
Seeing them in great numbers one quickly learns and steadily corroborates the fact that the Florentines are not beautiful.
In the account of how Lancelot learns of the queen's danger from Madoc de la porte, all three versions differ.
Lancelot first learns the news, but he meets Hector and Bohort together, and on their asking him if he has heard, replies in the affirmative.
A philosopher never worries about little hindrances, for he soon learns that a delay often proves to be an advantage.
The child learns that birds lay eggs and hatch them.
Perhaps he even learns how many young one or another species of animal usually brings forth and how long the female is pregnant.
Man learnsthe domestication of wild animals with the resultant production of meat and milk, and thereby obtains the use of hides, horns and furs for the most varied purposes.
Finally the child learns the truth, but not in the manner in which he ought to learn it if his education were a natural and rational one.
He also learnsthat mammals bring forth their young alive.
He learns when birds mate and that both the male and female bird build the nest, hatch the eggs and feed the young.
By his associations with the city the farmer becomes acquainted with the world in an entirely new and tempting way; he is influenced by ideas and learns of requirements of civilization that have been entirely foreign to him until then.
He who learns daily and hourly that rank, position and wealth count for everything, acquires a peculiar conception of human duties and of the institutions of state and society.
He learns to walk, to fear nothing, and it is in this manner, say the Arabs, that "we contrive never to have restive horses.
The animal understands what is meant, and in a very short time learns to obey merely the movement of his rider's body.
Every one who gives himself up to the chace, makes progress day by day in courage, and learns to despise accidents.
As soon as the child is old enough, he learns to read and write, which is an innovation among the djouad, for until recently the marabouts alone cultivated letters.
He is now ridden with spurs and, being thoroughly grounded in the foregoing lessons, he gives proof of mettle and learns to fear nothing.
This can be better understood when one learns that the average time spent in the preparation of a piece to run in New York is something like three weeks--three weeks in which the players have nothing else to occupy their minds.
Undivided in their approval of the noble and their disapproval of the ignoble, one soon learns that their ideas on the subject are theories not intended for practice.
A painting may hang for weeks before the painter learns whether he has succeeded or not; a book may be on the market nearly a year without its author knowing the result of his effort.
Each citizenlearns to subordinate his caprice and inclination to the command of the state.
After the individual learns to distinguish and unite these two phases of his life—the public and private—he is a much deeper and stronger man, and is capable of exercising and improving greater personal freedom.
Among the most important measures in which helearns to acquire facility is that of auscultation.
Woman learns how to hate in proportion as she--forgets how to charm.
It is only when the startling head-lines in his favorite morning paper call his attention to some frightful crime committed, that he learns either of its character, or location, or the causes which produced it.
It transpires that she had merely borrowed them for a while, as she tells you; and then on the 20th of October she learns the loss.
He learns to refer to books and the better sort of periodicals for his authority, and, gradually, through reading and discussion, begins to substitute convictions for inherited prejudice or indifference.
If a child really wants to come to the library he learns to conduct himself so as not to offend the people who are in other ways such good friends of his.
In the club the too-assertive child learns wholesome respect for the will of the majority, while his more retiring brother discovers that one man's vote is as good as another's.
He learns his lesson with one bump, and you have to go bumping into the same things day after day and wonder why you have so much 'bad luck'!
Bud" Thurston learns many a lesson while following "the lure of the dim trails" but the hardest, and probably the most welcome, is that of love.
A lovely girl, who has been reared among Mormons, learns to love a young New Englander.
Two impetuous young Southerners fall under the spell of "The Blight's" charms and she learns what a large part jealousy and pistols have in the love making of the mountaineers.
As the observer's viewpoint is shifted, the major peaks change greatly in outline and relative position, but despite this fact one soon learns to recognize each.
In traversing this loop one completely encircles the three Tetons and adjacent high peaks, viewing them from all sides, and learns to know them with an intimacy impossible to the visitor who contents himself with distant views.
In the spring ye merry jester learns conundrums bright and new (Dug up by the Christy Minstrels in the year of '52).
Carefully cherishing this distinction taught by mathematics and ethics, the religious mind learns to recognize in that only reality darkly seen through the glass of material things, that which should fix and fill its meditations.
But he soon learns that many events occur to thwart him, out of connection with any known individual, and these of a dreadful nature, hurricanes and floods, hunger, sickness and death.
As he grows in strength he learns to supply his own wants, and to make good his own volitions as against those of his fellows.
Getting increase of knowledge, since he learns Because he lives, which is to be a man, Set to instruct himself by his past self.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "learns" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.