allan_leigh wrote:I will throw another use of the word learned in; just to confuse everyone even more.
What about barristers in Court refering to their opponents as my leaned (2 sylabols "lean" and then "ed") collegue.
Now someone way better than me can tell me is a "learned collegue" a noun, a verb, or whatever.
I am Aussie, so us colonials do not know much
'learned' is a part-participle adjective in this case:
learn·ed [lúrnəd]
adjective
1. highly educated: well-educated and very knowledgeable
a learned professor
2. education scholarly: showing or requiring much education and knowledge
3. law honorable: used in addressing or referring to a lawyer in court
my learned colleague
4. psychology acquired, not instinctual: used to describe behavior or knowledge that is acquired through training or experience rather than being instinctual
[14th century. Originally the past participle of learn in the sense “to teach.”]
-learn·ed·ly [lúrnədlee], adverb
-learn·ed·ness, noun
Microsoft® Encarta® Reference Library 2005.