Lear

Noun

 * 1)  Something learned; a lesson.
 * 2)  Learning, lore; doctrine.
 * 3) * 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, III.vii:
 * when all other helpes she saw to faile, / She turnd her selfe backe to her wicked leares / And by her deuilish arts thought to preuaile [...].
 * 1) * 1898, Francis James Child (editor), Lord William, or Lord Lundy, from Child's Ballads,
 * They dressed up in maids' array,
 * And passd for sisters fair;
 * With ae consent gaed ower the sea,
 * For to seek after lear.

Verb

 * 1)   and  To teach.
 * 2)   To learn.
 * 3) * 14thC, Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canon's Yeoman's Prologue and Tale, from The Canterbury Tales,
 * He hath take on him many a great emprise,
 * Which were full hard for any that is here
 * To bring about, but they of him it lear.

Anagrams

 * earl, Earl
 * lare
 * rale
 * real

lear lear lear