0 past simple and past participle of apprentice --
1 to make someone an apprentice: --
Michelangelo was apprenticed to Ghirlandaio in Florence for three years.
They gave the years of their life, when they might have been trained and might have been apprenticed to a trade, to defending this country.
These boys are apprenticed to farms which agree to accept them.
His history is that in 1940 at the age of 15 he was apprenticed as a bricklayer.
It was as though it was only then that we began to shed opportunities for people to be apprenticed in industry.
I had the honour to be apprenticed to a very senior, honourable and distinguished junior.
A father has apprenticed his child, and has paid a premium of £200 for a two-year course.
In my area even young people who have been apprenticed find themselves no longer safe from the ravages of unemployment.
A man may have learned a trade, perhaps been apprenticed to it, but contracts dermatitis.