English
Etymology 1
From Middle English educaten, from educat(e) (“educated”, also used as the past participle of educaten) + -en (verb-forming suffix), from Latin ēducātus, the perfect passive participle of ēducō (“(of a child, physically or mentally) to bring up, train, nourish; (of a person in learning or art) to rear, educate, train; (plants or animals) to nourish, support, or produce”) (see -ate (verb-forming suffix)), further from an intensive/frequentative formed on ēducō (“lead out, draw out; to raise up, erect”) + -ō.
Pronunciation
Verb
educate (third-person singular simple present educates, present participle educating, simple past and past participle educated)
- (transitive) To instruct or train.
- Synonyms: instruct, teach
- Antonym: ignorize
Wang said such changes to the Baishui glacier provide the chance to educate visitors about global warming.
Derived terms
English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dewk- (0 c, 74 e)
Translations
to instruct or train
- Albanian: arsimoj (sq), edukoj (sq)
- Arabic: يُعَلم, درّب
- Armenian: կրթել (hy) (krtʻel)
- Azerbaijani: oxutmaq (to send to school), təlim etmək (to instruct, train), təhsil vermək, təhsilləndirmək
- Bengali: শিক্ষা দেওয়া (bn) (śikkha deōẇa)
- Bulgarian: образовам (bg) (obrazovam), обучавам (bg) (obučavam), тренирам (bg) (treniram)
- Catalan: educar (ca), instruir (ca)
- Cornish: adhyski
- Czech: vzdělat
- Dutch: opleiden (nl), onderwijzen (nl), opvoeden (nl)
- Esperanto: eduki (eo)
- Finnish: kouluttaa (fi), kasvattaa (fi)
- French: éduquer (fr)
- Georgian: please add this translation if you can
- German: ausbilden (de), erziehen (de)
- Greek: εκπαιδεύω (el) (ekpaidévo)
- Ancient Greek: παιδεύω (paideúō)
- Hebrew: חִינֵּךְ
- Hungarian: oktat (hu)
- Ido: edukar (io)
- Irish: oil (ga)
- Italian: istruire (it), educare (it)
- Japanese: 教える (ja) (oshieru), 教育する (ja) (kyōiku suru), 啓発する (ja) (keihatsu suru)
- Kabuverdianu: iduka
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: (please verify) taşandin (ku), (please verify) perwerde kirin (ku), (please verify) fêr kirin (ku), (please verify) elimandin (ku), (please verify) hîn kirin (ku), (please verify) terbiye dan (ku)
- Kyrgyz: окутуу (ky) (okutuu), ийитүү (iyitüü)
- Latvian: audzināt
- Malay: didik
- Maltese: eduka
- Maori: whakaako
- Norman: êcoler, êdutchi, înstruithe
- Old English: ġetēon
- Ottoman Turkish: اوكرتمك (öğretmek)
- Polish: edukować (pl) impf, uczyć (pl) impf
- Portuguese: educar (pt), instruir (pt), ensinar (pt)
- Romanian: educa (ro), instrui (ro)
- Russian: обуча́ть (ru) impf (obučátʹ), обучи́ть (ru) pf (obučítʹ), воспи́тывать (ru) impf (vospítyvatʹ), воспита́ть (ru) pf (vospitátʹ, literally “bring up, raise”)
- Scottish Gaelic: foghlaim, ionnsaich, teagaisg
- Sinhalese: ඉගැන්වීම (igænwīma)
- Spanish: educar (es), instruir (es)
- Swahili: elimisha
- Swedish: utbilda (sv), uppfostra (sv)
- Tigrinya: መሃረ (mäharä)
- Turkish: eğitmek (tr)
- Welsh: addysgu (cy)
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Etymology 2
From Middle English educat(e) (“educated”, also used as the past participle of educaten), borrowed from Latin ēducātus, see -ate (adjective-forming suffix) and Etymology 1 for more.
Adjective
educate (comparative more educate, superlative most educate)
- (obsolete) educated
Further reading
- “educate”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “educate”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
Italian
Adjective
educate f pl
- feminine plural of educato
Verb
educate
- inflection of educare:
- second-person plural present indicative/subjunctive
- second-person plural imperative
- feminine plural past participle
Latin
Verb
ēducāte
- second-person plural present active imperative of ēducō
Participle
ēducāte
- vocative masculine singular of ēducātus
Spanish
Verb
educate
- second-person singular voseo imperative of educar combined with te