Tutor
in sentence
94 examples of Tutor in a sentence
With help from
tutor
Jean Hersholt (as Dr. Juttner), he becomes an honor student, and is goes to university at Old Heidelberg.
Just last week, in one of my Screen Analysis tutorials, our
tutor
good-naturedly decided that if we were going to be film students we needed to be exposed to disturbing things.
The father is a
tutor
and the mother is probably a homemaker.
But Kissinger should remember what the young queen’s private
tutor
taught her about British politics: the prime minister must be “efficient,” and the Crown must be “dignified.”
He’s trying to make enough money to hire a private
tutor
for the exam.
At Barnard College, for example, we are paying our students to
tutor
the children of our faculty and staff.
Vining, a Philadelphia Quaker, served as the crown prince’s personal tutor, teaching him English and other subjects.
Sitnikov was the
tutor
to whom Serezha's secular education was entrusted.
'Let me take it off for you.''Serezha!' said his tutor, a Slav, stopping in the doorway that led to the inner rooms, 'take it off yourself.'
But Serezha, though he heard his
tutor'
s weak voice, paid no heed to it.
Go, go!Vasily Lukich is calling you,' said the hall-porter, hearing the approaching step of the tutor, and gently disengaging the little hand in the half-drawn-off glove which held him by his shoulder-strap, as he nodded and winked toward the
tutor.
They have to learn too, and so must you, sir!Go along!'On entering the schoolroom, instead of sitting down to his lessons, Serezha told his
tutor
of his guess that the parcel that had been brought must be a railway train.
'The
tutor
may be there and not yet dressed.
Half an hour later the Slav
tutor
found his pupil on the stairs, and for a long while could not make out whether he was in a temper or was simply crying.
'I expect you hurt yourself when you fell down?' said the
tutor.
Leave me alone!' he said, now addressing not his
tutor
but the world in general.
But he has not got a
tutor
for his children.''He is quite capable of taking this one from us.''Then you approve of my plan?' said M. de Renal, thanking his wife, with a smile, for the excellent idea that had just occurred to her.'There, that's settled.''Oh, good gracious, my dear, how quickly you make up your mind!''That is because I have a strong character, as the cure has had occasion to see.
All these cloth merchants are jealous of me, I am certain of it; two or three of them are growing rich; very well, I wish them to see M. de Renal's children go by, out walking in the care of their
tutor.
My grandfather used often to tell us that in his young days he had had a
tutor.
'Although I said so to her, to maintain my own superiority, it had never occurred to me that if I do not take this little priest Sorel, who, they tell me, knows his Latin like an angel, the governor of the poorhouse, that restless spirit, might very well have the same idea, and snatch him from me, I can hear the tone of conceit with which he would speak of his children's
tutor!
...This tutor, once I've secured him, will he wear a cassock?'M. de Renal was absorbed in this question when he saw in the distance a peasant, a man of nearly six feet in height, who, by the first dawning light, seemed to be busily occupied in measuring pieces of timber lying by the side of the Doubs, upon the towpath.
Go and pack your traps, and I'll take you to M. de Renal's where you're to be
tutor
to the children.''What am I to get for that?''Board, clothing and three hundred francs in wages.''I do not wish to be a servant,''Animal, who ever spoke of your being a servant?
That morning, many tears had flowed when she saw their little beds being carried into the apartment intended for the
tutor.
Madame de Renal advanced, oblivious for the moment of the bitter grief that she felt at the
tutor'
s coming.
'I have come to be tutor, Madame,' he at length informed her, put to shame by his tears which he dried as best he might.
So this was the
tutor
whom she had imagined an unwashed and ill-dressed priest, who was coming to scold and whip her children.
To her great delight, she discovered an air of girlish shyness in this fatal tutor, whose severity and savage appearance she had so greatly dreaded for her children's sake.
She could not believe her eyes; what she felt most of all was that the
tutor
ought to be wearing a black coat.
How fortunate these rich people are!'Madame de Renal had by this time arrived at the stage of remarking the most trivial changes in the state of the
tutor'
s mind; she mistook this envious impulse for shyness, and tried to give him fresh courage.
More than an hour later, when M. de Renal returned with the new
tutor
dressed all in black, he found his wife still seated in the same place.
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