| 释义 | coach I. \ˈkōch\ noun
 (-es)
 Usage: often attributive
 Etymology: Middle English coche, from Middle French, from German kutsche, probably from Hungarian kocsi (szekér) wagon from Kocs, from Kocs, village in Hungary
 1.
 a.  : a large usually closed 4-wheeled carriage having doors in the sides and generally a front and a back seat inside and an elevated seat in front for the driver
 b. Britain  : a railway passenger or mail car
 c.  : a railroad passenger car with reclining or nonreclining seats that is intended primarily for day travel
 d.  : baby carriage
 e.  : a closed 2-door single-compartment automobile with permanent back panel and top and in front two separate seats which may be turned down and in the rear a full-width cross seat
 f.  : motor coach
 g.  : house trailer
 h.  : an automobile body especially of a closed model
 i.  : a class of passenger air transportation at a lower fare than first class
 2.  : a cabin on the afterpart of the quarterdeck of a man-of-war usually occupied by the captain
 3.
 a. [so called from the tutor's being regarded as a means for conveying the student through his examinations]  : a private tutor who assists students especially in preparing for examination
 b.  : one who instructs or trains a performer or a team of performers (as in debating or in musical or dramatic performance); specifically  : one who instructs players in the fundamentals of a competitive sport and directs team strategy
 < fencing coach >
 < football coach >
 — compare manager, trainer
 c.  : a manual with a condensed body of information on a subject to be committed to memory
 d.  : a member of a team at bat in baseball who is posted near first or third base to direct base runners and signal to batters
 4. Australia  : a decoy bullock used to catch wild cattle
 5.  : sponsor 4b
 II. verb
 (-ed/-ing/-es)
 transitive verb
 1. archaic  : to transport in, place in, or provide with a coach
 2.
 a.  : to train intensively by detailed instruction, frequent demonstration, and repeated practice (as for an examination, a dramatic performance, or a public appearance)
 < coach pupils >
 < there never was a witness so obviously coached >
 b.  : to act as coach to (an athletic team or performer)
 c.  : to direct the movements of (a base runner)
 d.  : to give instructions, directions, or prompting to (one performing or attempting something)
 < two escort vessels, the first maintaining sound contact … while it coached the second … by signals — J.P.Baxter b.1893 >
 intransitive verb
 1.  : to go in a coach
 < he coached to that licentious city — S.H.Adams >
 2.
 a.  : to instruct as a coach : receive instruction from a coach
 b.  : to direct the movements of a base runner
 Synonyms: see teach
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