| 1. | marked by or suggestive of conscious effort; not spontaneous or natural; affected: studied simplicity. |
| 2. | carefully deliberated: a studied approval. |
| 3. | learned. |
noun, plural stud⋅ies, verb, stud⋅ied, stud⋅y⋅ing.| 1. | application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study. |
| 2. | the cultivation of a particular branch of learning, science, or art: the study of law. |
| 3. | Often, studies. a personal effort to gain knowledge: to pursue one's studies. |
| 4. | something studied or to be studied: Balzac's study was human nature. |
| 5. | research or a detailed examination and analysis of a subject, phenomenon, etc.: She made a study of the transistor market for her firm. |
| 6. | a written account of such research, examination, or analysis: He published a study of Milton's poetry. |
| 7. | a well-defined, organized branch of learning or knowledge. |
| 8. | zealous endeavor or assiduous effort. |
| 9. | the object of such endeavor or effort. |
| 10. | deep thought, reverie, or a state of abstraction: He was lost in study and did not hear us come in. |
| 11. | a room, in a house or other building, set apart for private study, reading, writing, or the like. |
| 12. | Also called étude. Music. a composition that combines exercise in technique with a greater or lesser amount of artistic value. |
| 13. | Literature.
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| 14. | Art. something produced as an educational exercise, as a memorandum or record of observations or effects, or as a guide for a finished production: She made a quick pencil sketch of his hands as a study for the full portrait in oils. |
| 15. | a person, as an actor, considered in terms of his or her quickness or slowness in memorizing lines: a quick study. |
| 16. | to apply oneself to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or practice. |
| 17. | to apply oneself; endeavor. |
| 18. | to think deeply, reflect, or consider. |
| 19. | to take a course of study, as at a college. |
| 20. | to apply oneself to acquiring a knowledge of (a subject). |
| 21. | to examine or investigate carefully and in detail: to study the political situation. |
| 22. | to observe attentively; scrutinize: to study a person's face. |
| 23. | to read carefully or intently: to study a book. |
| 24. | to endeavor to learn or memorize, as a part in a play. |
| 25. | to consider, as something to be achieved or devised. |
| 26. | to think out, as the result of careful consideration or devising. |

study stud·y (stŭd'ē)
n.
Research, detailed examination, or analysis of an organism, object, or phenomenon. v. stud·ied, stud·y·ing, stud·ies
To research, examine, or analyze something.