Coaching
[kohch] /koʊtʃ/
noun
1.
a large, horse-drawn, four-wheeled carriage, usually enclosed.
2.
a public motorbus.
3.
Railroads. .
4.
Also called air coach. a class of airline travel providing less luxurious accommodations than first class at a lower fare.
5.
a person who trains an athlete or a team of athletes:
a football coach.
6.
a private tutor who prepares a student for an examination.
7.
a person who instructs an actor or singer.
8.
Baseball. a playing or nonplaying member of the team at bat who is stationed in the box outside first or third base to signal instructions to and advise base runners and batters.
9.
Nautical. an after cabin in a sailing ship, located beneath the poop deck, for use especially by the commander of the ship.
10.
a type of inexpensive automobile with a boxlike, usually two-door, body manufactured in the 1920s.
11.
.
verb (used with object)
12.
to give instruction or advice to in the capacity of a coach; instruct:
She has coached the present tennis champion.
verb (used without object)
13.
to act as a coach.
14.
to go by or in a coach.
adverb
15.
by coach or in coach-class accommodations:
We flew coach from Denver to New York.
/kəʊtʃ/
noun
1.
a vehicle for several passengers, used for transport over long distances, sightseeing, etc
2.
a large four-wheeled enclosed carriage, usually horse-drawn
3.
a railway carriage carrying passengers
4.
a trainer or instructor: a drama coach
5.
a tutor who prepares students for examinations
verb
6.
to give tuition or instruction to (a pupil)
7.
(transitive) to transport in a bus or coach
n.
1550s, “large kind of carriage,” from Middle French coche (16c.), from German kotsche, from Hungarian kocsi (szekér) “(carriage) of Kocs,” village where it was first made. In Hungary, the thing and the name for it date from 15c., and forms are found in most European languages (e.g. Spanish and Portuguese coche, Italian cocchino, Dutch koets). Applied to railway cars 1866, American English. Sense of “economy or tourist class” is from 1949. Meaning “instructor/trainer” is c.1830 Oxford University slang for a tutor who “carries” a student through an exam; athletic sense is 1861.
v.
1610s, “to convey in a coach,” from coach (n.). Meaning “to prepare (someone) for an exam” is from 1849. Related: Coached; coaching.
Related Terms
slow coach
Read Also:
- Coaching-glass
noun 1. a small drinking glass of the early 19th century having no foot.
- Coach line
noun 1. a decorative line on the bodywork of a motor vehicle Also called carriage line
- Coachman
[kohch-muh n] /ˈkoʊtʃ mən/ noun, plural coachmen. 1. a employed to drive a or carriage. 2. Angling. . /ˈkəʊtʃmən/ noun (pl) -men 1. the driver of a coach or carriage 2. a fishing fly with white wings and a brown hackle n. 1570s, from coach (n.) + man (n.).
- Coach-screw
noun 1. . noun 1. a large screw with a square head used in timber work in buildings, etc
- Coachwhip
[kohch-hwip, -wip] /ˈkoʊtʃˌʰwɪp, -ˌwɪp/ noun 1. a , usually having a long lash, used in driving a . 2. Also called coachwhip snake. a long, slender snake, Masticophis flagellum, of the southern U.S. and Mexico, having a thin tail resembling a braided .