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Coach   /koʊtʃ/   Listen
Coach

noun
1.
(sports) someone in charge of training an athlete or a team.  Synonyms: handler, manager.
2.
A person who gives private instruction (as in singing, acting, etc.).  Synonyms: private instructor, tutor.
3.
A railcar where passengers ride.  Synonyms: carriage, passenger car.
4.
A carriage pulled by four horses with one driver.  Synonyms: coach-and-four, four-in-hand.
5.
A vehicle carrying many passengers; used for public transport.  Synonyms: autobus, bus, charabanc, double-decker, jitney, motorbus, motorcoach, omnibus, passenger vehicle.
verb
(past & past part. coached; pres. part. coaching)
1.
Teach and supervise (someone); act as a trainer or coach (to), as in sports.  Synonym: train.  "She is coaching the crew"
2.
Drive a coach.



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"Coach" Quotes from Famous Books



... strange and terrible recollections of the days when the saints, with the high praises of God in their mouths, and a two-edged sword in their hands, had bound kings with chains, and nobles with links of iron. Then were again heard voices which had shouted "Privilege" by the coach of Charles the First in the time of his tyranny, and had called for "justice" in Westminister Hall on the day of his trial. It has been the fashion to represent the excitement of this period as the effect of the Popish ...
— Critical and Historical Essays Volume 1 • Thomas Babington Macaulay

... painting—for which he has no natural capacity, but for which he thinks he has. He is then like those sailors, and meets justly the same fate, who think that because they can steer a boat admirably, they can also drive a coach and four. The love scene in Becket between Rosamund and Henry illustrates my meaning. It was a subject in itself that Tennyson ought to have done well, and would probably have done well in another form of poetry; but, done in a form for which he had no genius, he did it ...
— The Poetry Of Robert Browning • Stopford A. Brooke

... which soda is obtained. A white substance is now left undissolved; it is a compound of muriatic acid and lead, which, when heated, changes its colour, and forms Turner's yellow; a very beautiful colour, much in use among coach-painters. ...
— Young's Demonstrative Translation of Scientific Secrets • Daniel Young

... in festoons round the inside rails of the front seat and body, while about thirty hares dangled by their hind legs, with their long ears flapping to and fro, from the back seat and baggage rack. The wagon looked, I scarce know how, something between an English stage-coach when the merry days of Christmas are at hand, ...
— Warwick Woodlands - Things as they Were There Twenty Years Ago • Henry William Herbert (AKA Frank Forester)

... the following week Cardo drove to Caer Madoc to meet the mail-coach, which entered the town with many blasts of the horn, and with much flourishing of whip, at five o'clock every evening. In the yard of the Red Dragon he waited for the arrival of his father's guest. At the appointed time the coach came rattling round the corner, and, as it drew ...
— By Berwen Banks • Allen Raine


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