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Is "learn knowledge" acceptable in English?
Do you think it is correct to say " learn knowledge" in English?
I'm looking forward to your answer. Thank you!I was told " learn knowledge" is chinglish, but my American colleague sent me something containing a sentence like " I remember that when learning knowledge about the periodic table of elements in the second semester...." Is it correct here?
Oct 24, 2014 3:19 AM
Answers · 3
1
"Learn" is not the correct verb. "Acquire" and "gain" are probably the verbs most often used with "knowledge".
October 24, 2014
1
It is not technically correct. I think Chinglish is a good way to describe this phrase.
Knowledge is what you recieve from learning. So instead you would say that you are learning about a subject. Or that you have gained knowledge through learning.
I believe your colleague may have forgotten a comma. Without seeing the whole sentence, I can't say for certain, by I believe the sentence should read, "I remember that when learning, knowledge about the periodic table of elements in the second semester... (was useful/helpful/etc)."
I hope this helps.
October 24, 2014
1
You usually say "I am learning". :)
October 24, 2014
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JOY
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, Spanish
Learning Language
English, Spanish
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