schooling
  學校教育,教育,學費
  School, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Schooled p. pr. & vb. n. Schooling.]
  1. To train in an institution of learning; to educate at a school; to teach.
     He's gentle, never schooled, and yet learned.   --Shak.
  2. To tutor; to chide and admonish; to reprove; to subject to systematic discipline; to train.
  It now remains for you to school your child,
  And ask why God's Anointed be reviled.   --Dryden.
     The mother, while loving her child with the intensity of a sole affection, had schooled herself to hope for little other return than the waywardness of an April breeze.   --Hawthorne.
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  School·ing, n.
  1. Instruction in school; tuition; education in an institution of learning; act of teaching.
  2. Discipline; reproof; reprimand; as, he gave his son a good schooling.
  3. Compensation for instruction; price or reward paid to an instructor for teaching pupils.
  School·ing, a.  Zool. Collecting or running in schools or shoals.
     Schooling species like the herring and menhaden.   --G. B. Goode.
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  schooling
       n 1: the act of teaching at school
       2: the process of being formally educated at a school; "what
          will you do when you finish school?" [syn: school]
       3: the training of an animal (especially the training of a
          horse for dressage)