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Wisdom
n 1: accumulated knowledge or erudition or enlightenment 2: the trait of utilizing knowledge and experience with common sense and insight [syn: wiseness] [ant: folly] 3: ability to apply knowledge or experience or understanding or common sense and insight [syn: sapience] 4: the quality of being prudent and sensible [syn: wiseness, soundness] 5: an Apocryphal book consisting mainly of a meditation on wisdom; although ascribed to Solomon it was probably written in the first century BC [syn: Wisdom of Solomon, Wisdom]
Learning
n 1: the cognitive process of acquiring skill or knowledge; "the child's acquisition of language" [syn: acquisition] 2: profound scholarly knowledge [syn: eruditeness, erudition, learnedness, scholarship, encyclopedism, encyclopaedism]
Knowledge
n : the psychological result of perception and learning and reasoning [syn: cognition, noesis]
Experience
n 1: the accumulation of knowledge or skill that results from direct participation in events or activities; "a man of experience"; "experience is the best teacher" [ant: inexperience] 2: the content of direct observation or participation in an event; "he had a religious experience"; "he recalled the experience vividly" 3: an event as apprehended; "a surprising experience"; "that painful experience certainly got our attention" v 1: go or live through; "We had many trials to go through"; "he saw action in Viet Nam" [syn: undergo, see, go through] 2: have firsthand knowledge of states, situations, emotions, or sensations; "I know the feeling!"; "have you ever known hunger?"; "I have lived a kind of hell when I was a drug addict"; "The holocaust survivors have lived a nightmare"; "I lived through two divorces" [syn: know, live] 3: of mental or physical states or experiences; "get an idea"; "experience vertigo"; "get nauseous"; "undergo a strange sensation"; "The chemical undergoes a sudden change"; "The fluid undergoes shear"; "receive injuries"; "have a feeling" [syn: receive, have, get, undergo] 4: undergo an emotional sensation; "She felt resentful"; "He felt regret" [syn: feel] 5: undergo; "The stocks had a fast run-up" [syn: have]
Draw your own conclusions from this listing of definitions!1 This solves everything!1
your amusing poetry solves nothing.
you DID know that, didnt you? that the dictionary is just a poetic symbol of interpretation?
god, i hope you know that! words are meant to be defined and understood based on your collective perceptions and understandings, the world is but an open class room, you are nothing but a self serving student.
the dictionary only offers a limited interpretive explanation for words, truly, you must understand the word for your self. mostly, language is universal, but interpretation and usage are flexable, no matter what a dictionary says.