rudiments in English

noun
1
the first principles of a subject.
she taught the girls the rudiments of reading and writing
synonyms:basicsfundamentalsessentialsfirst principlesfoundationnuts and boltsABCs
2
an undeveloped or immature part or organ, especially a structure in an embryo or larva that will develop into an organ, limb, etc..
the fetal lung rudiment
3
a basic pattern used by drummers, such as the roll, the flam, and the paradiddle.
He flows like a slap bassist, performing exhausting rudiments in too-tight spaces with little grace and even less rhythm.
noun
noun

Use "rudiments" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "rudiments" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "rudiments", or refer to the context using the word "rudiments" in the English Dictionary.

1. I taught myself the rudiments of printing.

2. He mastered only the rudiments of geometry.

3. I have mastered the rudiments of economics.

4. He has just learned the rudiments of Chinese.

5. Everyone learns the rudiments of arithmetic in elementary school.

6. Coach Phillips taught me the rudiments of the game.

7. Businessmen he lectures to do not even know the rudiments of doctrine.

8. Her first pupils all now knew the rudiments of typing.

9. So, the rudiments of the game are securely locked in.

10. It was here that I had to learn the rudiments of technique.

11. Abecedarian: [noun] one learning the rudiments of something (such as the alphabet).

12. It didn't take me long to pick up the rudiments of the language.

13. The rudiments of Balneology appeared as early as the fifth century B

14. He advised my attending certain places in London for the acquisition of rudiments as I wanted.

15. It only took me an hour to learn/pick up the rudiments of skiing.

16. The Paris Commune is the social rudiments to practice Marx's theory of "rebuilding the individual ownership".

17. The student using this book has been exposed to the rudiments of bonding and structure.

18. Or sit in a tiny planetarium for an introduction to the rudiments of stellar navigation.

19. The left alone has the rudiments of a comprehensive rational critique which could challenge it.

20. It turned out he had had the rudiments of classicism flogged into him as a schoolboy.

21. Accidence (countable and uncountable, plural Accidences) The accidents or inflections of words; the rudiments of grammar

22. The synonyms of Accidences include are Accidence, Alphabet, Elements, Fundaments, Linguistics, Morphology, Rudiments, Stratification, Structure, Syntax, Principles and Sentence Structure

23. Love the animals: God has given them the rudiments of thought and joy untroubled. Fyodor Dostoyevsky 

24. These rudiments of space and close personal relationships grow out of the tasks set forth in the classroom.

25. There are many synonyms of Accidence which include Alphabet, Elements, Fundaments, Linguistics, Morphology, Rudiments, Stratification, Structure, Syntax, Principles, Sentence Structure, etc.

26. Chomsky considers these rules to be an innate feature of the human mind and to constitute the rudiments of what language is.

27. And he was now teaching young Patsy, unbeknownst to his elder brothers, the rudiments of the noble art of self-defence.

28. There are many synonyms of Accidences which include Accidence, Alphabet, Elements, Fundaments, Linguistics, Morphology, Rudiments, Stratification, Structure, Syntax, Principles, Sentence Structure, etc.

29. Persons of a mature age, who had Bulked large at home, would not stoop to plod through the rudiments of a new profession

30. This back-and-forth exchange teaches the infant the rudiments of conversation —a skill he will use for the rest of his life.

31. The curricula extend from the rudiments of education clear through the advanced high school course entitling the Aspirant to entrance into college or business life

32. - Providing support to cantor and choir during psalms, Acclamations, and hymns - Regularly attending practices and masses Licenses & Certifications Advanced Rudiments The Royal Conservatory of Music Grade 9 Practical Piano - First Class Honours

33. One learning the rudiments of something (as the alphabet)Etymology: Middle English abecedary, from Medieval Latin abecedarium, alphabet, from Late Latin, neuter of abecedarius of the alphabet, from the letters + b + c + d Abecedarian research studies (RCT’s) …

34. Americans, grossly and Crapulously ignorant as they are of the rudiments of human language, seize like mongrel curs upon the * [Notes indicated by numbersŠdue to the present transcriberŠare found at the end of this volume

35. Is that accident is (grammar) a property attached to a word, but not essential to it, as gender, number, case while Accidence is (grammar) the accidents, of inflections of words; the rudiments of grammar - [ [w:john miltonjohn milton]]

36. Especially the Americans, grossly and Crapulously ignorant as they are of the rudiments of human language, seize like mongrel curs upon the putrid bones of their decaying monkey-jabber, and gnaw and tear them with fierce growls and howls.

37. Basics - a statement of fundamental facts or principles rudiments fact - a statement or assertion of verified information about something that is the case or has happened; "he supported his argument with an impressive array of facts" 2

38. There were hypoplasia of amniotic cavity, abnormal connection of amnion to the embryo body, disturbed topographic position of the embryo in the embryo membrane, lack of internal organ rudiments, hypoplasiy of the allantoid stalk and of chorion frondosum.

39. • An Abecedarian is someone who is learning the alphabet • The Abecedarian were the followers of Nicholas Storck • A novice learning the rudiments of some subject • A person who is learning the letters of the alphabet • Of, like or pertaining to the order of the alphabet • Alphabetically arranged (as for beginning readers)

40. There are described (1) a seedling gonadoblastoma (gonocytoma III) in a girl of 19 with primary amenorrhoea, an XO/XY karyotype and dysgenetic ovaries: there were no testicular rudiments and the tumour made no connection with any other structure; (2) a large gonadoblastoma (gonocytoma II) in a chromatin positive girl of 16 with puberty menorrhagia, showing diverse interrelated patterns including dysgerminoma, fibroma, granulosal cell tumour and embryonal carcinoma; and (3) a seminoma in a normal man of 23 with 4 small foci of intratubular gonadoblastoma at the tumour margin.