No,
You can say:
I taught the children correct grammatical tense.
or
The learned scholar volunteered to tech the children correct grammatical tense
The remora has learned to coexist with the shark.
Albert Einstein was 3 years old when he learned.
Here are two ways of using it: He had learned a lot during his world tour by seeing so many cultures. He was a very learned person now.
The action verb in the sentence is "learned." It shows the action of acquiring knowledge about the influence of Native American and Hispanic cultures in New Mexico.
In the sentence above, quickly is the adverb. An adverb basically modifies a verb.
This is not a correct sentence. It might be used by someone that learned to speak in the inner city, but is not correct.
This sentence is not correct in English so I cannot translate it into correct Polish.
An informational sentence has a complete sentence. It has a fact or detail. And lastly, check for correct spelling and grammar. P.S if you really need to see this answer. YOU LEARNED IT IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL!!!!! LITERALLY!
In that sentence the verb "learned" is transitive, that is it has a direct object (the code).
No, depending on the context it should read: I/They/We/You have learned. He/she has learned.
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "about hydrogen." It functions as an adverbial phrase, providing information about what Jacques Charles learned.
they learned how to hunt and they learned how to read
Many people are learning English as a Second Language (ESL learner). Some haven't learned correct sentence structure.
The correct answer is C: Neither Jane nor Henry has learned Spanish.The following explains why the other choices are not correct:"Jennifer and her class" (A) and "the twins, Tina and Terry" (B) are both plural and require a plural verb: Jennifer and her class have learned Spanish."Either Samuel or his children" (D) is a compound subject that contains both a singular noun (Samuel) and a plural one (his children). In this case, the verb should agree with the part of the subject that is closer to it. Because the plural "his children" is closer to the verb, the correct verb is the plural "have".
Both are correct. But "learned" ( pronounced ler-ned) may also be an adjective.
It is not correct English to say "somebody has learned something from an early age" due to the use of "has".
"It is easy to use an exponent in a sentence." There, that sentence uses it!