


(16) He learns bucket-loads of information, including the brazenly anti-union pitches made by the various nations. (15) I was unaware of the seriousness of her illness until I learned of her death. (14) A child is learning unbelievable amounts of information. (13) Ormond Square was my first training ground, where I learnt my craft and developed a love for the beautiful game that I still have. (12) She was in her early fifties and her death was learned of with great regret by all who knew her during her short stay. (9) you'll learn! (10) we'll have to learn you to milk cows (11) Those were the same words a second-in-command had said when learning Jasmine's name three long years ago. Sorry, kids it’s survival of the fittest.(1) I was sorry to learn that Peadar had died (2) when did you learn the news? (3) they have to learn that it's better to be honest (4) we learn from experience (5) we'll learn the outcome tomorrow (6) it's never too late to learn (7) he's keen to learn (8) Just wait and see how mobiles companies will try to make us learn a numeric user name rather than an alphabetic one. There’s Darwinian law at work, and even the most supportive teacher is powerless to resist. It feels inevitable that the strong will thrive and the weak will flounder, no matter what we do. “The sophomores are a weak group this year,” we mutter, shaking our heads. If the brain is a muscle, then exercise-homework and studying-ought to build its strength.īut in practice, weak often carries a tone of resignation. Next, consider weak (along with its opposite, “ strong). Roberto is slow, but he sure isn’t stupid. We ought to reserve the word slow for those specific students with slow processing speed, regardless of their other strengths and weaknesses. Our system of time-pressured tests and overscheduled afternoons already favors quick thinkers over deep ones. When we use slow to mean dumb, we conflate speed with intellect.
