Some articles on studied:
... Thus, as students studied earth science, they would create interactive programs about the universe or geology ... As they studied English they would create interactive book reports or web sites about their favorite poets ... As they studied social science, they would develop web sites for model e-businesses or a CD-ROM about World War II ...
... He initially studied with a local teacher, and subsequently with Tietje Zonnefeld in Halifax, Nova Scotia ... attend McGill University in Montreal, where he studied with Charles Reiner ... He later studied with Kendall Taylor in London and Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli in Italy ...
... City College of New York where he studied biochemical engineering for three years before switching to fine arts in his last year ...
... He studied up to the Entrance (school leaving) standard in Rangpur High School ... Later he studied Sanskrit and Persian ... For sometime he studied ‘Daras’ under a Muslim fakir ...
... Following high school, Studer studied at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music but left the program after only one year, deciding to move with her family to Tennessee ... at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood (1975 to 1977), where she studied with Phyllis Curtin ... Studer studied with Hotter for one year before launching out on her professional career ...
More definitions of "studied":
- (adj): Produced or marked by conscious design or premeditation.
Example: "A studied smile"; "a note of biting irony and studied insult"- V.L.Parrington
Synonyms: deliberate
Famous quotes containing the word studied:
“Its only when you have to use what youve studied that you regret not studying more.”
—Chinese proverb.
“Major Bagley: So they really got the Arizona.
Captain Quincannon: Yes, sir. Hickham Field was hit just as bad as Pearl Harbor, lot of fifth column work.
Major Bagley: Ive studied all the wars in history, gentlemen, and Ive never come across any dirty treachery like that.”
—Dudley Nichols (18951960)
“If twins are believed to be less intelligent as a class than single-born children, it is not surprising that many times they are also seen as ripe for social and academic problems in school. No one knows the extent to which these kind of attitudes affect the behavior of multiples in school, and virtually nothing is known from a research point of view about social behavior of twins over the age of six or seven, because this hasnt been studied either.”
—Pamela Patrick Novotny (20th century)