Erudito in english

Scholar

pronunciation: skɑlɜr part of speech: noun
In gestures

erudito1 = connoisseur ; scholar ; polymath ; savant ; highbrow [high-brow] ; man of letters. 

Example: Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.Example: Under 'American scholar' he found editions published beginning, I believe, in the 1880s.Example: Many faculty would like to conceive of the 21st-century librarian as a polymath who is as sensitive to issues in the arts and humanities as he or she is knowledgeable about computers, networking and about related programming object management issues.Example: The subsequent debate, which engaged astrologers, doctors, theologians, & savants, reveals the tensions in French culture at the dawn of the Enlightenment.Example: People with a grade-school education, most of whose reading choices are in the low-brow category, cannot and do not easily read material written for the high-brow or even the increasingly college-trained middle-brow.Example: The library was greatly expanded in the late 1650s to accommodate the needs of the scholars and men of letters attached to Fouquet and to add lustre to his political career.

erudito2 = learned ; scholarly ; erudite ; highbrow [high-brow]. 

Example: Abstracts will accompany various learned, technical or scholarly contributions.Example: Personal authorship has been accepted for some time, and indeed reflects the scholarly practice of the western world.Example: The bulk of the town's residents had little time for culture, for the theater, for the erudite lecture.Example: The lowly chow of the rural poor has gone highbrow.

Erudito synonyms

student in spanish: estudiante, pronunciation: studənt part of speech: noun learner in spanish: aprendiz, pronunciation: lɜrnɜr part of speech: noun scholarly person in spanish: persona erudita, pronunciation: skɑlɜrlipɜrsən part of speech: noun
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