Dictionary
trainer
noun
A person who trains another; a coach.
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'trainer' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to someone who gives training or instruction in a particular skill or activity, such as a sports coach or a professional instructor. For example, "My brother is a personal trainer, specializing in strength and conditioning exercises."
Exact(60)
It then took me 10 years to be in a position to help found Citizens UK as a sister training institute and organising alliance, but from 1989 onwards Ed became my trainer, critic, mentor and friend.
Before the advent of the Wii Fit, Power Plate or personal trainer, came decades of fitness fads and dancefloor crazes.
You might be better showing us how to start a small business, one old sweat tells the trainer.
Ronda Zelezny-Green, PhD researcher in girls' education, Royal Holloway, University of London, London, UK. @GLaM_Leo Ronda is a language educator, teacher trainer, consultant, researcher and learner and an expert in gender, learning and mobiles, and advocates participatory and sustainable approaches to the use of mobiles for educational purposes.
Prior to this, Reed worked as head of volunteering at St John's Ambulance, initially volunteering as a front-line ambulance crew and first aid trainer before managing volunteers for a range of charities.
"I've always liked the five, it's a number I always do well with," said Baffert, the Hall of Fame trainer who has been thwarted in three previous Triple Crown tries, with Silver Charm (1997), Real Quiet (1998) and War Emblem (2002).
It offers video guides to poses from trainer Tara Stiles, including Apple TV support to play them on a bigger screen as you work out.
Stood over it is cycle trainer Giles Makins who takes great delight in telling me that if I switch the power mode to "sport" and start pedalling, I'll get quite a thrill.
"Her maiden debut was very pleasing against colts so to follow up here was good to see," Clive Cox, her trainer, said.
These had been especially created by the designer Jeremy Scott, with an extra special detail on them: a bright orange plastic cuff, designed to look like a shackle, with a chain connecting the trainer and the cuff, on each ankle.
The future Liverpool manager's high opinion of the shape he was in was shared by at least one other man - Scotland trainer Jim Steel.
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