Crossword-Solution: TIROCINIUM
We have 1 clue for the answer “TIROCINIUM”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| early training; first experience | 1 answer |
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Hint 1 meaning
A moving of the mind or soul; excitement of the feelings,
whether pleasing or painful; disturbance or agitation of mind caused by
a specific exciting cause and manifested by some sensible effect on the
body.
Hint 2 anagram
OIEONMT
Hint 3 another clue
A FEELING OF GREAT ELATION
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Sentences with TIROCINIUM (5)
When the publisher asked for a few more pages to his volume of “The Task,” Cowper gave him as makeweights an “Epistle to Joseph Hill,” his “Tirocinium,” and, a little doubtfully, “John Gilpin.” So the book was published in June, 1785; was sought by many because it was by the author of “John Gilpin,” and at once won recognition.
Green, who was as good and motherly a soul as ever lived, [AN OXFORD FRESHMAN 11] was yet (as we have shown) one of the Sappeys of Sapcot, a family that were not renowned either for common sense or worldly wisdom, and her notions of a boy's education were of that kind laid down by her favourite poet, Cowper, in his "Tirocinium" that we are "Well-tutor'd ~only~ while we share A mother's lectures and a nurse's care;" and in her horror of all other kind of instruction (not that she admitted Mrs.
This may seem borrowed from Cowper's "Tirocinium," --truths on which depend our main concern, That 'tis our shame and misery not to learn; but I believe the resemblance to be purely accidental.
Cowper's Tirocinium well expresses the situation:-- "Would you your son should be a sot or dunce, Lascivious, headstrong, or all these at once, Train him in public with a mob of boys, Childish in mischief only and in noise, Else of a mannish growth and, five in ten, For infidelity and lewdness, men." My next school was more of a success; for Eagle House, Brookgreen, where I was from eight to eleven, had for its owner and headmaster a most worthy and excellent layman, Joseph Railton.
Her early death, and that school discomfort which afterwards found vent in _Tirocinium_, appear to have aggravated a natural melancholia; though after leaving Westminster, and during his normal studies at both branches of the law, he seems to have been cheerful enough.