释义 |
tutorage|ˈtjuːtərɪdʒ| Also 7 tutridge, tutaradge. [f. tutor n. + -age.] 1. The office, authority, or action of a tutor or guardian; tutorship, guardianship, custody; tutorial control, direction, or supervision; instruction.
1617Moryson Itin. iii. 217 By the Law of Saxony, Tutorage belongs onely to the Kinsmen, by the Fathers side. 1657R. Ligon Barbadoes 23, I wanted no tutridge, in the learning this mystery. 1711Shaftesbury Charac., Misc. iv. i, The Tutorage of Fancy and Pleasure. 1716Prideaux Connex. O. & N. Test. i. iv. (1718) 168 Under the discipline and tutorage of that prophet. 1801Strutt Sports & Past. i. i. §2 These qualities..were natural to them, and not the effect of tutorage. 1837Lockhart Scott I. iii. 91 He was placed..under the domestic tutorage of Mr. James French. b. spec. at a university; also, the charge for or cost of this.
1638Earl of Cork Diary in Lismore Papers Ser. i. (1886) V. 64 Whose expences..for three yeares, for diett, and tutaradge, and aparell, I paid. 1721Amherst Terræ Fil. App. (1726) 322 He has, ever since his admission into Baliol, constantly paid the same tutorage, which other scholars do. 1733Oxford Act i. 7 Fifty Pounds with which I should have paid off my old Score, my Battles, my Tutorage, my Taylor [etc.]. 1775A. Burnaby Trav. 55 The expence to a student for room-rent, commons, and tutorage. 1835De Quincey in Tait's Mag. II. 367 The next item..is that which in college bills is expressed by the word Tutorage. c. A tutor's post, a tutorship.
1796Lamb Let. to Coleridge in Mem. i, Concerning the tutorage, is not the salary low? 1833Carlyle Misc. Ess., Diderot (1872) V. 40 He has reconciled Brothers, sought out Tutorages. †2. The condition of being under authority or control; = tutelage 2. Obs. rare.
1651Baxter Inf. Bapt. 28 He hath redeemed us from our bondage and tutorage. 1751Johnson Rambler No. 147 ⁋4 Banqueting upon my own perfections, and longing in secret to escape from tutorage. 1768Tucker Lt. Nat. (1834) I. 596 Conceited pertness teaches the new-loosened school-boy..thy scorn of tutorage and control. |