Learned in a sentence as an adjective

I guess I learned that hitting delete would be worse.

I never learned to do algebra "by the book," because I didn't need to.

He learned how to raise money by selling his business idea to other people who think like him.

If you fail to do that, you have learned absolutely nothing from my experience in the past 22 years.

And yet he has the audacity to say "I learned that one will see this sort of problems in all large scale companies."?

Here is a lesson I've learned the long, hard way after 30 years of being a strong introvert: it's not how or where you meet people that counts.

I've just learned more about this situation, and it turns out Airbnb\nhas been offering to fix it, from the very beginning.

By the time we reached Calculus I was still doing most of it in my head, as I had never really learned to write it out on paper.

I learned that most startups fail, and that when they fail, the people who end up doing well are the ones who were looking out for their own interests all along.

I learned a lot of basic technical skills, how to write code quickly and learn new APIs quickly and deploy software to multiple machines.

I learned how to talk to other people and gather information about the market from ordinary conversations.

I learned a crazy amount of JavaScript, some pretty advanced debugging / performance profiling techniques, and even gave some talks.

I learned how to architect systems for scale, and a lot of practices used for robust, high-availability, frequently-deployed systems.

I learned a lot more technical skills; it turns out that no matter how well you prepared in your job, finding a workable startup opportunity requires that you do things that you don't know how to do.

I learned to make decisions in the absence of firm information, knowing that I may be wrong but that I can't make any forward progress without trying something out that is almost certainly wrong.

I learned that even in successful companies, everything is temporary, and that great products are usually built through a lot of hard work by many people rather than great ah-ha insights.

Anyone who has every learned a musical instrument and doesn't look back on it with rose-colored glasses can attest to the mechanistic heartlessness of the piano or the guitar.

I learned something new and mathematically-interesting about the natural world, the author came up with a clever hack to enliven backgrounds, and we learn how to apply that to improve our own designs.

But other large regional ISPs pretty quickly learned not to set fire to their customer base, and, by the end, I think our customer service was pretty much at par for the whole area; we were no longer truly different based on support.

But hopefully after actually peeking in to see what it's about rather than making flawed generalizations based on traditional views of an emerging way of seeing the world, you would have learned a new way of looking at the world.

As I learned Mandarin Chinese up to the level that I was able to support my family for several years as a Chinese-English translator and interpreter, I had to tackle several problems for which there is not yet a one-stop-shopping software solution.

I learned the value of research and of spending a lot of time on a single important problem: many startups take a scattershot approach, trying one weekend hackathon after another and finding nobody wants any of them, while oftentimes there are opportunities that nobody has solved because nobody wants to put in the work.

One of the peculiar attributes of Amazon's action against us is that it was well publicized within Amazon -- and was apparently a result of outrage by a high-ranking executive after he learned that the former AWS engineer not only was working for a competitor, but had the gumption to open source a technology that he developed here.

Learned definitions

adjective

having or showing profound knowledge; "a learned jurist"; "an erudite professor"

See also: erudite

adjective

highly educated; having extensive information or understanding; "knowing instructors"; "a knowledgeable critic"; "a knowledgeable audience"

See also: knowing knowledgeable lettered well-educated well-read

adjective

established by conditioning or learning; "a conditioned response"

See also: conditioned