0 present participle of apprentice
1 to make someone an apprentice:
Michelangelo was apprenticed to Ghirlandaio in Florence for three years.
However, he tires of the boy and decides to get rid of him by apprenticing him to an establishment for unwanted pauper children.
Apprenticing nonnative speakers to new discourse communities.
So we get the names and occupations of the charity's trustees, some of their fiscal concerns and apprenticing practices and a few stories of the children whom their trust helped.
In the first place, it would greatly discourage young girls from apprenticing themselves to this particular trade.
Dealing with girls, there should be no difficulty in apprenticing them to various businesses and trades.
This trust was founded for two purposes: first, for providing homes for poor women; and secondly, for apprenticing boys in the neighbourhood to various local trades.
He was self-educated as a printer not apprenticing in any other shop.
Those with talent may move on to more elaborate designs apprenticing to a master outside the home.