0 to put someone in prison for political or military reasons, especially during a war: --
Many foreigners were interned for the duration of the war.
1 a male or female doctor who is still training, and who works in a hospital --
2 someone who is finishing training for a skilled job especially by getting practical experience of the work involved: --
3 to put someone in prison for political or military reasons --
4 someone who is receiving training by obtaining practical experience of a type of work --
5 a student, or someone who has recently finished their studies, who works for a company or organization for a short time, sometimes without being paid, in order to get experience of a particular type of work: --
It was amazing: we worked seven days every week, we were interning, we were studying acting, voice, movement, the whole thing.
Specifically designed institutions were necessary for interning miscreants who survived through begging and petty crime, and who caused problems of hygiene and order.
It will not tell you how to build a distributed computer, or how to run a spectrum auction, or how to assign interns to hospitals.
The more senior residents routinely assign death pronouncement work to their intern who will be almost exclusively responsible for this work.
One of the teacher education professors is on-site each of the four mornings serving as a supervisor for the interns.
Because current regulations stipulate that only the physician has the authority to fulfill this task, interns cannot pass off such work to medical students.
Individuals whose relatives went abroad out of dire economic necessity were suspect; families of men interned during the military campaign became 'socially dangerous elements'.
One day a week the interns participate in a two-and-a half-hour teaching seminar conducted by two teacher education professors.