81 adverbs to describe how to educating

He was liberally educated at an eminent grammar school in the country, from whence he was sent to the university of Cambridge, but to what college is not certain.

I only told you that I was vaguely interested in the peasants, and thought it would be a good thing if they could be gradually educated into a greater self-respect, a greater regard for cleanliness and that sort of thing.

Here, again, is another large portion of our race, who, under similar circumstances of climate, &c. &c., have, for several hundred years, educated their children very differently, and with different results.

Each one once had been physically fit or he would not have been passed to the front; and those among them who are officers are finely bred, finely educated, or they would not be officers.

Sir, (said Johnson, smiling) you have been regularly educated.'

Inexpressible enthusiasm among specially educated men, from the highest to the lowest.

Here is an unknown country boy, poor and poorly educated according to the standards of his age, who arrives at the great city of London and goes to work at odd jobs in a theater.

Ruskin was in early yearsindeed, far on in his manhoodin delicate health, and consequently he was educated privately till he passed to Christ Church College, Oxford, where, at the age of twenty, he won the Newdigate prize for verse, and graduated in 1842.

He was a cut-throat, and badly educated.

"People commonly educate their children as they build their houses, according to some plan they think beautiful, without considering whether it is suited to the purposes for which they are designed.

Poor and obscure as he was, and imperfectly educated, he aspired to be a lawyer; and at eighteen years of age he became a law-student in the office of Mr. Spruce McCay in Salisbury, North Carolina.

He is a mechanic, tolerably educated, and able to converse with intelligence on the projected reforms of the day, in cultivated language.

Neither possesses a scientifically educated class to which it can look for the powerful handling of this great occasion; and each has acquired under these disadvantages the same strange faculty for producing sane resultants out of illogical confusions.

Yes, the whole boy does go to school; but the whole boy is seldom educated after he gets there.

Mr. Orr is an Irishman, young in years, tall, cold, timid, quiet, yet excellently educated.

HUDSON, HOYT H. Educating liberally.

Ruskin was in early yearsindeed, far on in his manhoodin delicate health, and consequently he was educated privately till he passed to Christ Church College, Oxford, where, at the age of twenty, he won the Newdigate prize for verse, and graduated in 1842.

The descendants of these families are continually educated by the missionaries, and strictly watched: as to new converts, however, there are unfortunately none.

Walter had been expensively educated, but his mother was a singer and he had inherited her talent.

She was the founder of the celebrated School of St. Cyr, where three hundred young ladies, daughters of impoverished nobles, were educated gratuitously.

"A young lady who can be so brazen as to come into a room without a gentleman's arm to lean on, is, in my judgment at least, but indifferently educated, Hajji or no Hajji.

Vertue was a man of modest merit, and was educated merely as an engraver; but, conscious of talent, studied drawing, which he afterwards applied to engraving.

One wonders where these parents have deposited that stock of morally educating stimuli which is to be independent of poetic tradition, and to subsist in spite of the finest images being degraded and the finest words of genius being poisoned as with some befooling drug.

It founded schools and partially educated the rough people, but it produced no lasting literature.

Milton was the child of the Renaissance, inheritor of all its culture, and the most profoundly educated man of his age.

81 adverbs to describe how to  educating  - Adverbs for  educating