Example sentences of "[pron] [be] apprentice to " in BNC.

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1 His hands , which were apprenticed to the same mystery , arched and spread their fingers before him in air , involuntarily reproducing the tension and precision of the vaulting .
2 You 're apprenticed to a different tradesman each week , so no ties are formed .
3 Nearly three-quarters of the boys who were apprenticed to cutlers in and around Sheffield between 1650 and 1724 came from within a 15-mile radius of their new homes and only 4 per cent migrated more than 40 miles .
4 As young men the members of it were apprenticed to practised warriors , taught the profession of arms ; even as children they learned to follow the chase , to hunt boar and stag and wolf , not to mention all the lesser game of the forest ; they learned how to handle and appraise a hawk ; and in the evenings , in their father 's halls , or in the halls of other great lords to whom they had been sent to learn their profession , they listened to the minstrels singing songs of knightly prowess .
5 Yet his horizons were quickly widened to include the nearby town of Dorchester where he attended day school , and where at the age of 16 he was apprenticed to a local architect , despite his academic interests .
6 He was born at Preston in 1732 and got little education ; he was apprenticed to a barber , and set himself up in the barbering trade at Bolton later .
7 Leaving school at the age of 14 to study medicine , he was apprenticed to a surgeon in Worcester .
8 He was apprenticed to Professor Coleman in 1796 when aged 15 , and received his certificate from the College on 30 March 1799 ( for some unknown reason , this certificate disappeared for good that very same evening ) .
9 Where he was educated is not known but he was apprenticed to John Marshall , a surgeon from Kilsyth , who was in charge of Glasgow University 's Physick garden in 1704 ( a physick garden was a source of herbs and other plants used for medical purposes ) .
10 When 14 he was apprenticed to the Edinburgh firm of Norie , who were house painters — hardly an ideal apprenticeship for what he wanted to be .
11 Upon leaving the Institution , he was apprenticed to a bookbinder but this did not satisfy his ambitions , and he began to take a leading part in the affairs of the deaf .
12 After his education , he was apprenticed to his father 's coach-building premises , graduating after three years to an office position which he retained until his father retired in 1890 .
13 Murdoch Macleod was born in Edinburgh and educated at Donaldson 's Hospital after which he was apprenticed to an Edinburgh tailoring firm , but this existence did not meet with his taste for adventure , so at the age of 19 he embarked on a steamer from Southampton to South Africa in 1892 .
14 The details of his early life are not known , but by 1450 he was apprenticed to Robert Botiller , a goldsmith in London , and by 1458 had become a lowys ( the term used in the records of the Goldsmiths ' Company to describe someone allowed to practise the craft ) .
15 He was apprenticed to a jeweller and hoped to become a watchmaker .
16 From 1795 to 1800 he was apprenticed to his uncle Samuel [ q.v. ] , during which time in 1797 he started exhibiting at the Royal Academy , and in the beginnings of his career he was indebted in different ways to both Samuel and his other architect uncle , James [ q.v . ] .
17 He was apprenticed to John Lowder , then architect to the city , and supplemented this training by visits to France c .1818 and later , in 1829 , to Italy .
18 Around 1906 he was apprenticed to the German immigrant lithographer , Paul Fischer , in Islington .
19 At an early age he was apprenticed to the lace trade in Nottingham , but in about 1820 moved to Chard in Somerset , a centre of lace-making , and was so successful that within a few years he had established his own business as a manufacturer of bobbins and bobbin carriages .
20 After school he was apprenticed to a wood engraver .
21 At the age of fifteen he was apprenticed to John Powning , architect and builder , of Exeter .
22 As an adolescent he was apprenticed to Roger Vivian , an assistant of the Levant Company , and during the 1640s served as a factor to him in Smyrna .
23 He was apprenticed to William Pickering , a surgeon to the Liverpool Infirmary , in 1763 .
24 Little is known about his family , and his date of birth can be inferred only from the fact that he was apprenticed to a mercer in 1528 .
25 In 1816 he was apprenticed to John Cudworth , a Quaker , of the firm Broadhead & Cudworth , Leeds , to learn the retail tea trade .
26 He was apprenticed to a watchmaker , and as a boy was a keen amateur conjuror , giving a public performance of his own tricks at the age of sixteen .
27 In 1904 he was apprenticed to the firm of Carl Hentschel , engravers , in Fleet Street .
28 He was apprenticed to a bookseller , Humphrey Robinson , on 4 February 1635 , and became a freeman of the Stationers ' Company on 1 March 1643 and a liveryman in 1657 .
29 They moved to Cowbridge , Glamorgan , in about 1823 , where he was apprenticed to a doctor and amateur artist called Harrison .
30 He was apprenticed to Robert Stephenson & Co. at Newcastle from 1846 to 1851 .
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