different between learnings vs earnings

learnings

English

Etymology

1484; early spellings include lernynges.

Noun

learnings

  1. (proscribed) plural of learning
    • 1483, William Caxton, The Book of the Knight of the Tower (translation of circa 1372, Geoffroy IV de la Tour Landry, Livre pour l'enseignement de ses filles du Chevalier de La Tour Landry), Chapter cxxxvii (heading):
      The thre enseygnementes or lernynges whiche Cathon gaf to his sone.
    • circa 1611, William Shakespeare, Cymbeline, Act 1, Scene 1, line 43:
      … The King he takes the babe
      To his protection, calls him Posthumus Leonatus,
      Breeds him and makes him of his bed-chamber,
      Puts to him all the learnings that his time
      Could make him the receiver of; …

Usage notes

The term learnings was not in common use in the 19th and 20th century, though the countable noun sense learning (thing learned) dates to Middle English (14th century; see leornyng), and the plural learnings to Early Modern English. Note that early use of learnings often have the sense or connotation “teachings” (see examples above), as was the case of learn generally. It has found occasional use for centuries, including by Shakespeare, and parallel constructions are commonplace – compare teachings and findings.

However, from circa 2000 it became a buzzword in business speak, particularly in constructions such as “key learnings” or “apply these learnings”; this was preceded by occasional educational use from the 1950s. Some disapprove of this, and it sounds ungrammatical enough to be used as an example of broken English, as in the comedy Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (2006). Suggested alternatives include lessons learned, “things one learned” – or simply lessonsdiscoveries, findings, insights, and takeaways.

Most major dictionaries do not label the word as uncountable.

Synonyms

  • lessons learned

Coordinate terms

  • teachings

References

Further reading

  • Guide to Grammar and Writing, Capital Community College Foundation (see Fri, May 30, 2003)
  • “What the heck are “learnings”?”, Maeve Maddox
  • Plural of “learning”, English Stack Exchange
  • Learnings, Wordreference.com
  • “‘Learnings’ Is A Stupid, Stupid Word”, Jeffrey McManus

learnings From the web:

  • what learning style am i
  • what learning disability do i have
  • what learning disabilities are there
  • what learning disability
  • what learning styles are there
  • what learning style is reading
  • what learning theory is direct instruction
  • what learning style is hands on


earnings

English

Etymology

earning +? -s

Noun

earnings pl (plural only)

  1. Wages, money earned, income.
  2. (finance) Business profits.
  3. (finance) Gains on investments; returns.

Translations

Derived terms

  • retained earnings
  • transfer earnings

Anagrams

  • Nearings, Reginans, aginners, engrains, geranins, grannies

earnings From the web:

  • what earnings come out tomorrow
  • what earnings is social security based on
  • what earnings are excluded from workers comp
  • what earnings per share means
  • what earnings are subject to medicare tax
  • what earnings are taxable
  • what earnings are coming out this week
  • what earnings percentile am i in
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like