An individual who is learning a recognized occupation in accordance with a written apprentice-training contract between the worker and his or her employer or employers which provides for a given period of planned work experience through employment on-the-job, supplemented by appropriate related instruction, and with other specified provisions of the arrangement
A student who has been accepted by a Master or Mistress of the Laurel The word is a job description, and should not be used as a title (Used in some Kingdoms )
A person (often a young person) employed under a Training Agreement Once, apprenticeships were only available in a limited number of trades Today, apprenticeships and traineeships are also available in a whole new range of industries including arts and entertainment, finance and banking, horticulture, hospitality and tourism See New Apprenticeships
One who is bound by indentures or by legal agreement or by any means to serve another person for a certain time, with a view of learning an art or trade
"A learner of a craft; one who is bound by legal agreement to serve an employer in the exercise of some handicraft, art, trade, or profession, for a certain number of years, with a view to learn its details and duties, in which the employer is reciprocally bound to instruct him " (Oxford English Dictionary at the Electronic Text Center of the University of Virginia)
One who is bound by indentures, by legal agreement, or by any means to serve another person for a certain time, with a view of learning an art or trade
Generally an apprentice is a novice or new student of a subject The definition of "apprentice" has changed with time and still varies with the place or occupation In the past, it meant one that was legaly bound to a Master in the arts as a student for a prescribed period (usualy 7 years) In exchange for their labor an apprentice was given an education in the craft and basic tools of the trade Today an apprentice may be any student learning from someone of greater knowledge Upon graduation an apprentice becomes a Journeyman There have been and still are laws in some places defining and regulating the relationship between apprentice and master In some countries it is illegal to teach a trade or take on an apprentice, unless you have master's papers However, in many places, such as the United States, the old apprentice system is an institution of the past See Apprenticeships in Blacksmithing
One who is bound by indentures or by legal agreement to serve a tradesperson, or other person, for a certain time, with a view to learn the art, or trade, in which his master is bound to instruct him
One who is bound by indentures or by legal agreement to serve a mechanic, or other person, for a certain time, with a view to learn the art, or trade, in which his master is bound to instruct him
If a young person is apprenticed to someone, they go to work for them in order to learn their skill. I was apprenticed to a builder when I was fourteen. someone who works for an employer for a fixed period of time in order to learn a particular skill or job (aprentis, from aprendre , from apprehendere; APPREHEND)