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Discover LudwigThe word "prentice" is an archaic term that is not commonly used in modern written English
It refers to an apprentice, someone who is learning a trade or skill under the guidance of a more experienced person. Example: "As a young prentice in the blacksmith's shop, he learned the art of metalworking." Alternatives include "apprentice" or "trainee."
Dictionary
prentice
verb
To apprentice.
synonyms
Exact(42)
Much of the novel takes place in 1990, and follows Scottish student Prentice McHoan, and his large, and extremely eccentric, family.
It is important not to be hard on Prentice.
For Scottish people of my generation (roughly the same age as Prentice), it occupies a poignant place in space and time.
The main narrative force, where Prentice attempts to solve the mystery of his uncle's fate, only really builds up late on in the book.
Prentice, who seems to have been an intelligent and sympathetic man, recoiled from the story, and decided to print the collection as it had originally been conceived.
Using Skype to make a voice call, Mr Prentice notes, is routine in America, subject to some restrictions in Canada and can get you arrested in Ethiopia.In his book, "The Internet of Elsewhere", published last year, Cyrus Farivar, a journalist with Ars Technica, a website, chronicles the development of the internet in Estonia, Iran, Senegal and South Korea.
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The adjacent borough of Englewood Cliffs (south) contains the headquarters of the Prentice-Hall publishing complex.
More needs to be done to encourage Britons to work in the care sector, such as better funding, a 'care-prentice' scheme to encourage older people into care work, and a national campaign to attract more male care workers.
Bohm had been the favoured protegé of Niels Bohr, and his first book, Quantum Theory (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1951), was a lengthy defence of the Copenhagen Interpretation of the quantum theory.
The first sign of philosophy of biology becoming a mainstream part of philosophy of science was the publication of David Hull's Philosophy of Biological Science in the prominent Prentice-Hall Foundations of Philosophy series (Hull 1974).
But most discussion has steered clear of the basic issue of whether suicide itself is right or wrong, or can ever be rationally chosen".Our society has not evolved a measured, considered set of moral rules, laws, and customs concerning suicide," observes Margaret Pabst Battin, author of "The Death Debate" (Prentice Hall; $24.95), a lucid survey of the ethical issues suicide raises.
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