[ US /əˈpɹɛntəs, əˈpɹɛntɪs/ ]
[ UK /ɐpɹˈɛntɪs/ ]
NOUN
  1. works for an expert to learn a trade
VERB
  1. be or work as an apprentice
    She apprenticed with the great master
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How To Use apprentice In A Sentence

  • He founded his own business in the mid 1970s, and by 2004, at least fifteen master artists currently heading their own studios had apprenticed under him.
  • Wizard Apprentice Nicodemus had thought to be the prophesied Halcyon, but is afflicted with cacography, which stuns his growth as a magician. REVIEW: Spellwright by Blake Charlton
  • Son of a court equerry in Munich, he was apprenticed in 1582/3 to the court painter, Hans Donauer.
  • Would-be apprentices are questioned about their attitude towards foreigners, and they take part in a week-long workshop on tolerance and diversity.
  • I know that the idea of an apprenticeship is more important in the classical world, that you should build up a solid career bit by bit, rather than aim for sudden, one-time success. Archive 2006-10-01
  • The school's culinary dean recalls being hung from a meat hook for improperly boning veal during one of his 14-hour days as an apprentice in 1949 Germany.
  • They were simply skilled craftspeople hired for jobs and trained through a system of apprenticeship.
  • Now is not the moment to call time on apprenticeships. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bill's loyalty to his apprentice had been ill rewarded this evening and no trainer could afford to be sentimental.
  • Appreciating this pedagogy enables us to practice catechesis as a craft in which content and the methods of transmission are united in a living whole: we are apprenticed into the Lord's own school of learning and teaching. Islam
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