Instruction

ahd-5
  • noun. The act, practice, or profession of instructing.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. Imparted knowledge.
  • noun. An imparted or acquired item of knowledge.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. An authoritative direction to be obeyed; an order.
  • noun. Detailed directions about how to do something.
  • noun. A sequence of bits that tells a central processing unit to perform a particular operation and can contain data to be used in the operation.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. The act of instructing or teaching; communication of knowledge; education; enlightenment.
  • noun. Knowledge imparted; edifying discourse or precepts; teaching.
  • noun. Direction given; order; command; mandate: commonly in the plural.
  • noun. Synonyms 1 and 2. Training, Discipline, Nurture, Cultivation, Instruction, Teaching, Education; indoctrination, schooling, breeding, advice, counsel. Training is the development of the mind or character or both, or some faculty, at some length, by exercise, as a soldier is trained or drilled. Discipline is essentially the same as training, but more severe. Nurture, by its derivation, expresses a tender, continuous, and protracted training, beginning at an early age. Cultivation, in the active sense, is often used of the training, discipline, or development of some single department of the nature: as, the cultivation of the understanding, the taste, the conscience. (See culture.) Teaching is the general word for the imparting of knowledge: as, the profession of teaching. Instruction has the imparting of knowledge for its object, but emphasizes, more than teaching, the employment of orderly arrangement in the things taught. Tuition is the most external or formal of these words, representing the act. Education is the largest word of all the list, having for its object, like training and discipline, the development of the powers of the man, but generally also a symmetrical development of the whole man, the mind and the moral nature, by instruction, exercise, etc. Education is the word chosen to express the best ideas that men have of the process of teaching and discipline that shall make the wisest, noblest, and most effective kind of man.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • noun. The act of instructing, teaching, or furnishing with knowledge; information.
  • noun. That which instructs, or with which one is instructed; the intelligence or information imparted.
  • noun. Precept; information; teachings.
  • noun. Direction; order; command.
  • noun. a segment of coded data that is interpreted by a computer as a command to perform an operation or series of operations. The term instruction is applied to both the electronic form of the data as represented in and executed by the computer, and to any line of written computer code which is interpreted as one instruction by a compiler. A computer program is comprised of one or more instructions.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. The act of instructing, teaching, or furnishing with information or knowledge.
  • noun. An instance of the information or knowledge so furnished.
  • noun. An order or command.
  • noun. A single operation of a processor defined by an instruction set architecture.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • noun. a message describing how something is to be done
  • noun. (computer science) a line of code written as part of a computer program
  • noun. the activities of educating or instructing; activities that impart knowledge or skill
  • noun. the profession of a teacher
  • Word Usage
    "Job details: assess customers for literacy, vocational aptitude … seek partnership opportunities; develop a pool of literacy tutors to assist in instruction and tutoring as …"
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