Studying in a sentence as a noun

He won IOI gold medal twice and was studying at MIT back then. What he had achieved was my dream and I wanted to follow his steps.

People who were good at studying and taking people's word for things sailed through and to this day can't prove things rigorously. These kids don't like taking things apart.

But if you're studying under Dijkstra, just suck it up and soak in as much as you can, even if the "customer service" leaves to be desired. Again, you're 19- you'll live.

I've seen Sal's face light up when he gets an unwieldy new shipment of textbooks to start studying in preparation for his videos. Does he dive right into some videos?

These are usually those people you knew in high school/college who were excellent at studying for and passing tests. Excellent at getting great grades on projects.

Gauss discovered it in the early 19th century while studying the phase of the moon, before Fourier described his transform. He published it in latin, and the text was lost until 1984.

Busiest time in my life was when I was studying for the California Bar exam. According to the program I was doing, I was expected to study 12 hours a day. Most people I knew did 12+ hours of studying at least, all of them passed the bar.

If I want to think of myself as an academic, I'll upload a picture of me at my desk studying and watch the "intellectual" ratings pour in. Then I can feel assured that other people perceive me the way I want to be perceived.

My first 4 years studying ME in Stuttgart were almost 100% lectures with a final exam at the end of the semester. Virtually no tutoring and very little corrected homework.

Imagine enjoying a court side seat at a game, studying in a classroom of students and teachers all over the world or consulting with a doctor face-to-face -- just by putting on goggles in your home. Nah, I'd rather not, thank you.

To see many interesting examples, try studying the period leading up to the American Civil War.

Those who make such a judgement are guilty of performing a cost/benefit study without the benefit of studying the benefit." The book was first published in 1987 and apparently has not been very influential.

Problems that I've found worth studying: - Parsing. This is hard if you don't know the standard techniques: mostly recursive descent parsing with precedence -- or a parser generator, but that won't teach you much unless you write the generator yourself.

I was studying physics, working for a nationally recognized lab under a guy who should have gotten a nobel, when I got a job as a software developer and realized that was what I really wanted to do with my life. I used to put down that I studied physics, but eventually, I just dropped it.

To reiterate, years of studying gender issues from a historical and philosophical perspective have shown rather conclusively that not everything sex-related is sexist. The "big dongle" statement was not in any way a 'sexist joke'.

Usually one night of work is spent simply installing it, the second night studying what's going on, and then the third, fourth, and possibly fifth nights actually fixing the problem, testing it, and making sure it's good enough to submit. It's a lot of work to ask me to do, even if you're paying me as a contractor, because again, I'm not looking to be a contractor.

I've been studying sightings and evidence as a hobby for many years, and based on credible eye-witness testimony I'm comfortably convinced that the United States government knows a lot more about intermittent atmospheric phenomenon than they are letting on. Why?

Basically, one can become a criminal not only without knowing he's doing anything wrong, but even without a theoretical way of finding it out - unless you survey all the lawyers you can find, you can not know if a yes from your lawyer would land you in jail or not, and you have no chance of understanding the law even if you spend years studying it - ultimately, the only thing that matters is the word of the enforcers on how they understand it. It's like living in the same apartment with alcoholic gorilla prone to random outbursts of violence.

Studying definitions

noun

reading carefully with intent to remember

See also: perusal perusing