Sentence example with the word 'erudite'

erudite

abstruse, cultivated, deep, encyclopedic, lettered, pansophic, polymath, profound, scholastic, well-read

Definition adj. having or showing profound knowledge

Last update: September 22, 2015


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Mr.Ghose gave an erudite lecture on the modern history of India.   [adjective]

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It goes way beyond what even the most erudite scholar could possibly have known about in its entirety.   [adjective]

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They tend to opt for very erudite books which some of us find unreadable.   [adjective]

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"I, on mine, the indefatigable and erudite Chalmers."   [adjective]

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Yet I would we had more light; but I fear there is little chance of finding hereabout any erudite author de re vestiaria.   [adjective]

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She was learned, erudite, wise, competent, curiously proficient in history, crammed with Latin, stuffed with Greek, full of Hebrew, and more of a Benedictine monk than a Benedictine nun.   [adjective]

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For the JinkOshotO-ki, by its strong advocacy of the mikados administrative rights as against the ustirpations of military feudalism, may be said to have sowed the seeds of Japan~s modern polity; and the Taihei-ki, by its erudite diction, skilful rhetoric, simplification of old grammatical constructions and copious interpolation of Chinese words, furnished a model for many imitators and laid the foundations of Japans 19th-century style.   [Please select]

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It is true that Byzantine scholars were erudite rather than original.   [Please select]

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I was "perfect" in geography, a most erudite subject.   [Please select]

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Froude's conclusions were much the same as the erudite Canon's.'   [Please select]

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He was quite the most erudite man I have ever known.   [Please select]

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