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单词 coach
释义
coach1 nouncoach2 verb
coachcoach1 /kəʊtʃ $ koʊtʃ/ ●●● S3 W2 noun Entry menu
MENU FOR coachcoach1 sport2 help for exam3 bus4 train5 horses6 in plane/train
Word Origin
WORD ORIGINcoach1
Origin:
1500-1600 French coche, from German kutsche, probably from Hungarian kocsi (szeker) ‘carriage from Kocs’, from Kocs village in Hungary; 1-2 because a trainer ‘drives’ students through their tests
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • a basketball coach
  • a drama coach
  • Many businesspeople have begun flying coach to save money.
  • She's the coach of the volleyball team.
  • We got a professional football coach to come and help us train the team.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • As the coach was loaded on Sunday morning, the children looked on sadly.
  • Chaney is one of the best coaches in the country, but he doesn't score any points for neatness.
  • If he was careful she might even allow him to travel back with her on the coach.
  • She knows almost no one in the Bay Area except her teammates and coaches.
  • The coach makes his decisions and he is the boss.
  • When the painting is complete it will be married with the Londonderry and Lough Swilly coach body now in store at Pennyburn.
  • Word comes from Boston that longtime coach and scout John Killilea died.
Thesaurus
THESAURUS
someone who teaches as their job, especially in a school: · a high school teacher
(also headteacher British English) the teacher who is in charge of a school or college: · The teacher sent him to the principal’s office.
someone who gives private lessons to one student or a small group of students. In Britain, a tutor is also a teacher in a university: · They hired a tutor to help him with his English.· Your tutor will help you find a subject for your essay.
someone who teaches in a university or college: · University lecturers aren’t very well paid.
a teacher in a college or university. In Britain, a professor is a high-ranking university teacher, especially one who is head of a department: · She was professor of linguistics at Cambridge University.
someone who teaches a sport or a practical skill such as swimming or driving: · He works as a ski instructor in the winter.· a driving instructor
someone who helps a person or team improve in a sport: · a professional tennis coach
especially American English formal someone whose job involves teaching people, or someone who is an expert on education: · Most educators agree that class sizes are still too big.
someone who teaches people particular skills, especially the skills they need to do a job: · a teacher trainer· Many companies pay outside trainers to teach management skills to their staff.
a woman who lived with a family and taught their children in past times: · As a governess, Charlotte Brontë received twenty pounds a year.
a large vehicle that people pay to travel on: · There were a lot of people on the bus.
British English a bus with comfortable seats used for long journeys: · Taking the coach is cheaper than the train.
a small bus with seats for six to twelve people: · The school uses a minibus to take teams to matches.
a bus with two levels: · the red double-deckers in London
(also bendy bus British English) a very long bus that has a joint in the middle that allows it to go around corners: · Articulated buses have been used in Europe for many years.
British English, streetcar American English, trolley/trolley car American English a vehicle for passengers, which travels along metal tracks in the street, and usually gets power from electric lines over the vehicle: · We waited at the stop for the tram.· San Diego has a well-used trolley system.
American English a vehicle with many different parts for people to sit in, and which usually has open sides. A tram runs on wheels and is used to take tourists from place to place within a particular area: · The tram takes visitors around the backlot of Universal Studios, where many famous movies were once made.
Longman Language Activatorsomeone who teaches
someone who teaches, especially someone whose job is to teach children in a school: · She's a teacher in the high school.· I remember having some pretty awful teachers when I was at school.English/science/chemistry etc teacher: · The school doesn't have enough French teachers.teacher of: · a conference for teachers of English
someone who gives lessons to just one student or a small group of students: · When she was ill she studied at home with a private tutor.· They hired a private tutor to help Carlos with his English.
someone who teaches a sport or a practical skill: swimming/driving/riding etc instructor: · I managed to find a very good driving instructor.· a ski instructor
someone who trains a person or a team in a sport, and helps them to improve their skills: basketball/football/tennis etc coach: · We got a professional football coach to come and help us train the team.
someone who trains people in the skills they need to do a job: · Many companies now pay outside trainers to come in and teach management skills to their staff.· I work as a teacher trainer.
a university teacher - used in Britain to mean a teacher of the highest rank, and in the US to mean any university teacher who has a higher degree such as a PhD: · The meeting will be chaired by Professor Andrew Jones.· Archie's father is a retired physics professor.professor of: · She's a professor of history at Oxford University.
someone who teaches at a university or college: · Watson is now a lecturer at the University of Bradford.· a chemistry lecturerlecturer in: · a lecturer in economics
someone who works, studies, and teaches in a university, and has a lot of knowledge about a particular subject: · Academics can usually get time off teaching to do their own research.
formal someone who teaches in a school, college, or university: · Most educators agree that intimidating children is not the best way to encourage them to learn.· Professor Taylor is generally recognized as one of the state's most respected educators.
American all the teachers in a college or university: · Norman White has been on the faculty at UCLA for over thirty years.· Nearly half the faculty turned out to show their support.
WORD SETS
all-terrain, adjectivebackpedal, verbbicycle, nounbicycle, verbbike, nounbike, verbbrougham, nounbuckboard, nounbuggy, nouncab, nouncaravan, nouncarriage, nouncart, nouncarter, nouncarthorse, nouncavalcade, nounchariot, nouncharioteer, nounchuck wagon, nouncoach, nouncoachman, nouncoaster brake, nouncrossbar, nouncycle, nouncycle, verbdismount, verbdogcart, noundogsled, noundray, nounfork, nounfreewheel, verbgoad, verbgoad, nounhackney carriage, nounhandcart, nounhandlebars, nounhansom, nounharness, nounharness, verbhayride, nounhorse-drawn, adjectivehorseshoe, nounhorsewoman, nounhowdah, nounhusky, nounlandau, nounmountain bike, nounoxcart, nounpack animal, nounpack horse, nounpair, nounpedal, nounpedal, verbpenny-farthing, nounpush-bike, nounpushcart, nounreflector, nounrickshaw, nounride, verbsaddle, nounsaddle bag, nounsedan chair, nounsledge, nounsledge, verbsleigh, nounspoke, nounstagecoach, nounsurgery, nounsurrey, nountandem, nounteam, nountrace, nountrailer, nountrap, nountricycle, nountruck, noununicycle, nounvelodrome, nounwagon, nounwagon train, nounwheelwright, noun
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY Meaning 1types of coach
· Jody became the women’s basketball coach.
(=the coach in charge of a team)· Jim is head coach of the Dallas Mavericks.
· He took a job as an assistant coach at the college.
(=for a team that represents a whole country)· Davies was the national coach up to the 1995 World Cup.
· He’s the youth team coach.
(=a very good one)· He’s one of America’s top coaches.
(=one whose job is teaching a sport)· The tennis club has a professional coach.
Meaning 3types of coach
(=travelling quickly without stopping much)· Express coach services run throughout the day.
· The company had thirty-five new passenger coaches.
· A huge number of tourist coaches visit the site.
· Travel is by air-conditioned coach.
verbs
· We spent three days travelling by coach across France.
· A group of tourists were getting on the coach.
formal (=get on one)· When everyone was there, we boarded the coach for the journey home.
coach + NOUN
· The two-night coach trip to Paris will cost £149.
· How about going on a coach tour around Europe this year?
(=a relatively short coach journey to visit a place)· There are coach excursions to the great classical site at Ephesus.
(=a group of people who travel by coach)· We’re organizing a coach party to the theatre.
· He worked as a part-time coach driver.
· You will go from Victoria Coach Station to Amsterdam.
· Our express coach service goes to the South of France and Costa Brava.
· The advantage of coach travel is that it’s relatively cheap.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
· I'm afraid your flight departure has been delayed.
· Who do you think will be the next England team manager?
· I’ve lost my train ticket.
· The price is £98, inclusive of coach travel.
· They took a boat trip to see the seals.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE
· Plucked out of school rugby by the current All Black assistant coach, Ellis has impressed with his ability and polished skills.· I thought maybe I could be hired by a Major League Soccer team or continue on as an assistant coach.· Bill Tobin is a firm believer that the scouting department should have more influence than assistant coaches in running the draft.· Suns assistant coach Donn Nelson has a loaded itinerary.· It came during a trip to visit a former Pierce assistant coach in Northern California.· He was with Baltimore as an assistant coach with Don Shula.· There were no blurry eyes, no one-on-one sessions with the assistant coaches in a remote corner.
· With the co-operation of the national weightlifting coach, Ziegler persuaded three weightlifters to begin using Dianabol.· The League had decided to keep that Saturday clear to help national coach Andy Roxburgh prepare for the match.· There, Williams wowed national coaches with her array of pitches.· Last Sunday the Leicester City manager agreed to become caretaker national coach for the friendly in Turin.· In an act of admirable but ultimately misguided loyalty, the national coach Andy Roxburgh stood by his dispirited keeper.
NOUN
· Fast guys tire, a basketball coach once said of his own high-rise team, but big guys don't shrink.· It took those games to cement his decision on a basketball coach.· If he keeps blossoming at this rate, too, basketball coaches soon will be pitching tents in his yard.· She finds her answer on the bulletin board where the job as varsity basketball coach is posted.· The son of a high school basketball coach, Knight has always relished pressure situations.· Now the girls basketball coach has given the school and the town of Bushnell even more reason to be proud.· She was once a girls' high school basketball coach.
· Mr Baldry, 49, a qualified football coach, was until recently managing director of a travel and sports company.· It turned out about the good-looking fellow from Essex County that he was a football coach who also did some counseling.· Hey, that's a big contract new football coach John Mackovic got!· Mr Yanase is a football coach, a psychologist, and a college president.· He was an assistant football coach at Colorado in the 1980s and had a law practice.· In managing your finances, you should look at your assets the way a football coach looks at his team.
· The campaign also will feature celebrities such as former Dallas Cowboys head coach Tom Landry singing soccer's praises.· Carolina coach Matt Doherty is in just his second year as a head coach, his first with the Heels.· Another possible candidate is MCC's highly successful head coach, Don Wilson.· Bill Russell becomes the first black head coach in the National Basketball Association in 1966.· Lantz resigned effective immediately after nine years as head coach.· Shula became head coach of the Cincinnati Bengals.
· A series of cancellations by coach parties left their Rosslyn Hotel in Falmouth with no bookings at all.· Notes Large coach parties will be split into smaller groups.
· Were there two valuations for the coach station in Southampton?· Its city bus station was sold for development and its long-distance coach station was wholly unexpectedly sold for £4 1 million.· A back-up power system at the coach station did operate but only lasted three hours.· Because of Stagecoach's speculation, the ratepayers of Southampton have had to fork out El 38,000 to provide another coach station.· We are close to coach station and walking distance from railway station.· After all, why do they need a coach station?
· It would entail a coach trip of about two and a half hours each way.· We also have a two-night coach trip which costs just £149.· She was one of the more cautious volunteers, yet she took the coach trip.· Looe Bindown golf course is 4 miles away, boat and coach trips can be arranged.
VERB
· Callinicos drives a coach and horses through postmodernism; well and good.· But how useful would such a right be anyway, if an intelligence agency can drive a coach and horses through it?· Those things drive me crazy, coaches worried about how they look, because then their decisions are not team decisions.· He called a coach quickly, laid Oliver on the seat, and drove away.
· Usually in May we hire a coach and about 50 of us set off on a 3-day, 2-night hotel stay.· No university wants to hire a coach with a history of lawsuits, a troublemaker, a rocker of boats.· School officials said they planned to hire a new coach by the end of the week.· For $ 42 million, the Patriot should hire his own quarterback coach.· Garrett noted that date as an important factor in hiring a coach.· The situation was resolved when the school hired its new coach.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • But how useful would such a right be anyway, if an intelligence agency can drive a coach and horses through it?
  • Callinicos drives a coach and horses through postmodernism; well and good.
  • And the brakes feel like they could stop an express train.
  • He took the ball like an express train and burst through the midfield defence.
  • It still sounded like an express train in the confines of the small garage.
  • It was perfect for low-fare express coach services.
  • The subway trip seemed endless, even on the express train.
  • Transfer to the Kobe line and catch the 8: 20 express train.
  • Visitors have to take a local train to visit Delft; the express trains speed by.
hen house/coach house/storehouse etc
1sport [countable] someone who trains a person or team in a sport:  a tennis coach the Norwegian national coach see thesaurus at teacher2help for exam [countable] especially British English someone who gives private lessons to someone in a particular subject, especially so that they can pass an examination3bus [countable] British English a bus with comfortable seats used for long journeys SYN bus American Englishby coach We went to Paris by coach.on a coach She’s going to Grimsby on a coach. a coach trip to Scotland The restaurant was full of coach parties (=groups of people travelling together on a coach).4train [countable] British English one of the parts of the train in which the passengers sit SYN car American English5horses [countable] a large carriage pulled by horses and used in the past for carrying passengers6in plane/train [uncountable] American English the cheapest type of seats on a plane or train:  We flew coach out to Atlanta.COLLOCATIONS– Meaning 1types of coacha football/basketball/tennis etc coach· Jody became the women’s basketball coach.the head coach (=the coach in charge of a team)· Jim is head coach of the Dallas Mavericks.an assistant coach· He took a job as an assistant coach at the college.a national coach (=for a team that represents a whole country)· Davies was the national coach up to the 1995 World Cup.the team coach· He’s the youth team coach.a top coach (=a very good one)· He’s one of America’s top coaches.a professional coach (=one whose job is teaching a sport)· The tennis club has a professional coach.COLLOCATIONS– Meaning 3types of coachan express coach (=travelling quickly without stopping much)· Express coach services run throughout the day.a passenger coach· The company had thirty-five new passenger coaches.a tourist coach· A huge number of tourist coaches visit the site.an air-conditioned coach· Travel is by air-conditioned coach.verbsgo/travel by coach· We spent three days travelling by coach across France.get on/get off a coach· A group of tourists were getting on the coach.board a coach formal (=get on one)· When everyone was there, we boarded the coach for the journey home.coach + NOUNa coach trip· The two-night coach trip to Paris will cost £149.a coach tour· How about going on a coach tour around Europe this year?a coach excursion (=a relatively short coach journey to visit a place)· There are coach excursions to the great classical site at Ephesus.a coach party (=a group of people who travel by coach)· We’re organizing a coach party to the theatre.a coach driver· He worked as a part-time coach driver.a coach station· You will go from Victoria Coach Station to Amsterdam.a coach service· Our express coach service goes to the South of France and Costa Brava.coach travel· The advantage of coach travel is that it’s relatively cheap.
coach1 nouncoach2 verb
coachcoach2 ●●○ verb [transitive] Verb Table
VERB TABLE
coach
Simple Form
PresentI, you, we, theycoach
he, she, itcoaches
PastI, you, he, she, it, we, theycoached
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave coached
he, she, ithas coached
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad coached
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill coach
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have coached
Continuous Form
PresentIam coaching
he, she, itis coaching
you, we, theyare coaching
PastI, he, she, itwas coaching
you, we, theywere coaching
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave been coaching
he, she, ithas been coaching
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad been coaching
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill be coaching
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have been coaching
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • As well as teaching French, Martin coached tennis in his spare time.
  • He seems to enjoy coaching children.
  • James used to coach high school football.
  • We need someone to coach the school team.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Drake started coaching lawyers on their opening statements a decade ago.
  • He once coached Hollander, and he was thrilled to see the young man top Davis and make the world team.
  • It was raining then, but she was focused on the job, on the opportunity to coach in the Pac-10.
  • She also sang with Lothian Gaelic Choir and coached disabled horse riders.
  • When I played pro ball, I'd volunteer and coach in the off-season.
Thesaurus
THESAURUS
to give lessons in a school, college, or university: · I taught for a year in France.· He teaches physics at York University.
to teach in a college or university by giving talks to groups of students on a subject: · He lectures in engineering at a local college.
formal to teach someone how to do something, especially a particular practical skill: · He was instructing them how to use the computer system.· Staff are instructed in how to respond in the event of a fire.
to teach one student or a small group: · I found work tutoring Mexican students in English.
especially British English to give private lessons, especially so that someone can pass an important test: · He coaches students for their university entrance exams.
to teach a person or group of people in the particular skills or knowledge they need to do a job: · It will take at least a month to train the new assistant.
to teach someone over a long period, usually at school or university: · He was educated in England.· Her parents want to educate her at home.
informal to show someone how to do a job or task that they have just started doing: · Miss McGinley will show you the ropes and answer any questions you may have.
Longman Language Activatorto teach someone a skill or how to do something
· I've always wanted to learn to ski - could you teach me?teach something to somebody · It took us several hours to teach all the dance moves to the girls.teach somebody something · Grandpa taught me a new card trick.teach somebody (how) to do something · Who taught you to drive?· My mother taught me how to cook.
to teach someone the practical skills and knowledge that they need to do a job: · A lot of employers don't train their staff properly.train somebody to do something: · All employees will be trained to use the new computer system.· The dog was trained to detect illegal drugs.train somebody in something: · We train people in skills such as typing and business administration.
to teach a person or a team the skills they need for a sport: · He seems to enjoy coaching children.· We need someone to coach the school team.· As well as teaching French, Martin coached tennis in his spare time.
to teach someone about something, especially a practical subject or skill, by explaining it and showing them what to do: · The person who instructed you obviously didn't know much about map-reading!instruct somebody in something: · New recruits are instructed in marching and the handling of weapons.
informal to show someone how to do something such as a job that they are new to: · You'll need someone with you for the first few days to show you the ropes.· Susan will show you the ropes and answer any questions that you have.
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
· I'm afraid your flight departure has been delayed.
· Who do you think will be the next England team manager?
· I’ve lost my train ticket.
· The price is £98, inclusive of coach travel.
· They took a boat trip to see the seals.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN
· Most basketball coaches would probably be eager to take a shot at slumping Syracuse right about now.
· He had the idea of offering parents a party formula of football coaching parties.· No one sniggered when football coaches, business executives and politicians became fairer haired.
· Stability is not firing the head coach every three or four years.· The 37-year-old former Pepperdine player took over as head coach last season.· But then Garrett fired Parker and named Bibby as the interim head coach on Feb. 7.· She was thirty-one at the time, and this was her first head coaching job.· But on the other hand, there are only 29 head coaching jobs out there.
· Most officials have been as effective again this season as most players, coaches and viewers.· As Tark himself noted, many of the players he coached at San Joaquin Memorial are now civic and business leaders.
· The team is being coached by Rachel Heyhoe Flint, one of the best female cricket players in the country.· They are out there showing everyone what a team coached by Jody Runge can do.· Both teams will be coached by Ulstermen, and also there will be an Ulster umpire, Tom Morrison.· He took over a team that Bill Walsh coached to only three wins in 1994, and he elicited seven victories.· Nothing wrong with that for a team and coach under such pressure-playing to the conditions and to your strengths.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • But how useful would such a right be anyway, if an intelligence agency can drive a coach and horses through it?
  • Callinicos drives a coach and horses through postmodernism; well and good.
  • And the brakes feel like they could stop an express train.
  • He took the ball like an express train and burst through the midfield defence.
  • It still sounded like an express train in the confines of the small garage.
  • It was perfect for low-fare express coach services.
  • The subway trip seemed endless, even on the express train.
  • Transfer to the Kobe line and catch the 8: 20 express train.
  • Visitors have to take a local train to visit Delft; the express trains speed by.
hen house/coach house/storehouse etc
1to teach a person or team the skills they need for a sport SYN  traincoaching:  Nigel coaches a cricket team in his spare time. see thesaurus at teach2especially British English to give someone private lessons in a particular subject, especially so that they can pass an important testcoachingcoach somebody in/for something The child was coached for stardom by her mother.3to help someone prepare what they should say or do in a particular situation – used to show disapprovalcoachingcoach somebody in/on something The girl must have been carefully coached in what to say in court.
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