Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    tutelage
    /ˈtjuːtɪlɪdʒ/

    noun

    • 1. protection of or authority over someone or something; guardianship: "the organizations remained under firm government tutelage"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. TUTELAGE definition: 1. help, advice, or teaching about how to do something: 2. help, advice, or teaching about how to…. Learn more.

  3. tutelage. noun. tu· te· lage ˈtü-tə-lij. ˈtyü- Synonyms of tutelage. 1. a. : instruction especially of an individual. b. : a guiding influence. a business under the tutelage of a new director. 2. : the state of being under a guardian or tutor. 3. a. : an act or process of serving as guardian or protector : guardianship. b.

  4. help, advice, or teaching about how to do something: Under the tutelage of Professor Roberts, the 900 delegates assessed and discussed the social market economy. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Teaching in general. asynchronous. chief academic officer. CLIL. clue in. communicative. didactic. hothouse. inculcate. miseducate.

  5. Tutelage definition: the act of guarding, protecting, or guiding; office or function of a guardian; guardianship.. See examples of TUTELAGE used in a sentence.

  6. Tutelage can mean guardianship as well as teaching and sometimes it's difficult to tell which sense is meant. If an athlete is under the tutelage of his coach, the coach teaches him but is also responsible for the athlete's health and well-being.

  7. 1. the act or office of a guardian or tutor. 2. (Education) instruction or guidance, esp by a tutor. 3. the condition of being under the supervision of a guardian or tutor. [C17: from Latin tūtēla a caring for, from tuērī to watch over; compare tuition]

  8. If one person, group, or country does something under the tutelage of another, they do it while they are being taught or guided by them. [ formal ] Several well known names passed under his tutelage.

  9. Definition of tutelage noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Origin of Tutelage. From Latin tutela (“a watching, guardianship, protection" ), from tueri (“to watch, guard" ); see tuition. From Wiktionary. Latin tūtēla ( from tūtus) ( variant past participle of tuērī to guard) –age.

  11. tutelage. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English tu‧te‧lage /ˈtjuːtəlɪdʒ $ ˈtuː-/ noun [ uncountable] formal 1 when you are taught or looked after by someone under somebody’s tutelage You can attend embroidery classes under the tutelage of Jocelyn James. 2 responsibility for someone’s education, actions, or property ...