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- Dictionarytu·tor/ˈto͞odər/
noun
- 1. a private teacher, typically one who teaches a single student or a very small group: "a voluntary tutor in adult literacy"
verb
- 1. act as a tutor to (a single student or a very small group): "his children were privately tutored"
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a teacher who teaches a child outside of school, especially in order to give the child extra help with a subject he or she finds difficult: His parents got him a tutor to help with his maths. During my illness I was taught by a series of home tutors. B2 UK. a teacher at a British college or university who teaches one student or a small group :
The meaning of TUTOR is a person charged with the instruction and guidance of another. How to use tutor in a sentence.
A tutor is someone who gives private instruction: tutors teach one-on-one. If you ever helped someone learn something, you could say you tutored them. "Tutor" is also the title of someone who works with students one-on-one.
to teach a child outside of school, especially in order to give the child extra help with a subject he or she finds difficult: Oscar tutors our son in math.
A tutor is a teacher at a British university or college. In some American universities or colleges, a tutor is a teacher of the lowest rank.
Tutor definition: a person employed to instruct another in some branch or branches of learning, especially a private instructor.. See examples of TUTOR used in a sentence.
tutor. (ˈtjuːtə) n. 1. (Education) a teacher, usually instructing individual pupils and often engaged privately. 2. (Education) (at universities, colleges, etc) a member of staff responsible for the teaching and supervision of a certain number of students.