Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of schooling.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Adopted knowledge from Rumsfeld kind of schoolings in rulings from DEMOCRACY!

    Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion 2010

  • JACKSON: I would do my schoolings for three hours with a tutor.

    CNN Transcript Jun 26, 2009 2009

  • JACKSON: I would do my schoolings which was three hours with a tutor.

    CNN Transcript Jun 27, 2009 2009

  • Such divergences don't necessarily mean that one is right and everybody else is wrong; it means that our respective lives and schoolings and reading and environments have led us to different places, where rights and wrongs don't always apply or have the same values.

    Archive 2007-02-18 2007

  • Such divergences don't necessarily mean that one is right and everybody else is wrong; it means that our respective lives and schoolings and reading and environments have led us to different places, where rights and wrongs don't always apply or have the same values.

    The Fine Art of Saying Nothing 2007

  • And I, like many others all across America, stopped their schoolings, left their jobs, left their families, and rejoined the military.

    CNN Transcript Aug 31, 2007 2007

  • PARSONS: I think because to a real extent, journalism is like priesthood, and certain experiences and schoolings and schools that you have to go to become a member of the club.

    CNN Transcript Feb 17, 2007 2007

  • PARSONS: I think because to a real extent, journalism is like priesthood, and certain experiences and schoolings and schools that you have to go to become a member of the club.

    CNN Transcript Feb 18, 2007 2007

  • I need my african culture back that America kept denying me through public schoolings.

    Boondocks: Dr. King Would Blast Niggers, Relocate to Canada. Nathaniel Livingston 2006

  • On due reflection, they conclude that rather than suffer the whippings, schoolings, and scoldings incident to boy and girlhood, they -- would prefer to stay where they were.

    The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No. 2, August, 1862 Devoted to Literature and National Policy Various

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