释义 |
Definition of mentor in English: mentornoun ˈmɛntɔː 1An experienced and trusted adviser. (经验丰富值得信赖的)导师;指导者 he was her friend and mentor until his death 直到1915年他去世为止,他一直是她的良师益友。 Example sentencesExamples - In these important years, many of us are either fortunate or wise enough to find mentors to help guide our decisions.
- He has been both a friend and a mentor to him guiding him thorough the course of his life.
- She has become not only my musical mentor but also a friend of mine and of my family.
- But finding a guide, a coach, a friend, a mentor and a support unit, all wrapped up in the one person, is not going to be easy.
- He was a great mentor and friend and he will be sadly missed by everyone who was lucky enough to know him well.
- Experienced mentors and script editors are attached to each project.
- She's a very dear friend and a great mentor and I really look up to her.
- It relies on a network of 160 volunteers acting as business mentors to advise clients and help develop the new enterprises.
- Back in Rome, he met Polybius, who became his friend and his mentor in preparing him for a public career.
- Pat was one of the mentors who guided, the ladies to the final of the Ulster Championship.
- He was a kind, gracious, and generous friend, and a mentor beyond compare.
- My colleagues were my best friends, family, peers, confidantes and mentors.
- Get friends and mentors, advisors you trust and bounce your ideas off them.
- A group of mentors will guide refugees through their early months in the town in a scheme aimed at acclimatising them to life in their new home.
- He became my mentor and good friend and he was one of the world's great authorities on James Joyce.
- His father is more than a customer, however, serving as a mentor and adviser to Daly.
- Under the terms of the Trust, a mentor is to be provided for the successful students to assist and support them during their time at college.
- The latter was his mentor and friend, for whose editorial skills he always retained sincere admiration.
- He is our mentor, our guide, and he possesses an intellect the size of a planet.
- He was very encouraging and since then he has become a mentor and friend.
Synonyms adviser, guide, confidant, confidante, counsellor, consultant, therapist master, spiritual leader, rav, rebbe, guru, swami, maharishi, acharya - 1.1 An experienced person in a company or educational institution who trains and counsels new employees or students.
师傅;导师;指导者 regular meetings between mentor and trainee help guide young engineers through their early years as modifier a mentor program Example sentencesExamples - Trained high school mentors actually facilitate the program, often speaking from their own painful experiences.
- The Year 9 mentors are trained by children's charity Childline and run lunchtime support clubs as well as a drop-in centre where younger students can call in for advice or help.
- Selecting high school students as mentors can present unique challenges for program directors.
- Seniors, who quickly turn into mentors to the students, only require patience, a sense of humour and an empathy towards children.
- Both schools have developed a peer support programme with the county council's behavioural support unit, where senior students are trained as mentors for younger students.
- They have both a counsellor service and mentors for students that need them.
- Students meet with mentors to go over academic success skills, such as planning, listening and test-taking strategies.
- They also use their own students as tutors, recruiters, and mentors for less experienced students.
- We want music teachers to be successful as pedagogues and as mentors to their students.
- The employees act as business mentors to provide a career related voice of experience for the student mentee.
- There is also a new mentor program linking young people to adults to develop positive relationships outside their peer group.
- A good mentor can help a student or practitioner sort through the options and make decisions.
- Some of the structures for on-the-job training - like mentors and coaches - are in place.
- It's a tale of the teacher mentor and student who learn from each other, but only in part.
- After four sessions with his mentor, the student was able to pass the course.
- The team train volunteers to become mentors on a whole range of topics including drugs and crime.
- As the report describes, the mentor program has contributed to the career advancement of protégés.
- Anti-bullying charity Kidscape has trained 24 students to become peer mentors for new students.
- It will not even allow me to say that I have been the best mentor and example for students, but I have always tried to be.
- Peer mentors also help students identify campus leadership opportunities and community service projects of interest.
Synonyms trainer, teacher, tutor, coach, instructor
verb ˈmɛntɔː [with object]Advise or train (someone, especially a younger colleague) 指导;培训(某人,尤指年龄更小的同事) both trainees were expertly mentored by a site supervisor mentoring should be encouraged Example sentencesExamples - Carol Adams wants automatic time out of the classroom so teachers can learn from and be mentored by experienced colleagues during their first five years.
- Using herself as an example, she said she mentored youngsters in her church and family before retiring.
- It says a new generation of leaders need to be mentored and trained, while collaborative work between groups could become a condition of funding.
- Now the 50 divisional heads are being mentored by junior managers.
- I met people there that were a little older, who mentored me.
- They are mentored through sporting and social activities ranging from rock climbing to basketball by more than 270 volunteers.
- It would be great for him to be mentored into working.
- When they are here we would like to make sure they are orientated and mentored both culturally, linguistically and also into the system in which they are working.
- How about giving a tutorial, or mentoring those of us that want to do more but just don't know how?
- Through the years he mentored many young doctors and nurses.
- I was mentored by a millionaire, and now I'm mentoring those who read the book.
- With all these requisite skills, most successful camp directors have been carefully mentored through the ranks.
- The older man had mentored the younger so expertly that Powell had become surplus to Charlton's requirements.
- Awarded to recognize a writer's entire body of work, the prize's terms also include having mentored other writers.
- Graduate students no longer feel like apprentices who are being mentored to join a scholarly guild.
- After the team goes through the initial training, they are continually being trained and mentored by peers and lead staff.
- He gets mentored and is advised and is on a six, rather than a five - year program.
- In the making of many of these sites, teens are being mentored and trained to create the kind of media they want.
- He has worked very hard to make his way in the party, making his name by slogging it out in opposition rather than being mentored or having union connections to smooth his path.
- As a teacher, she has mentored many of the young singers coming to prominence, Clare Teal being one.
OriginMid 18th century: via French and Latin from Greek Mentōr, the name of the adviser of the young Telemachus in Homer's Odyssey. Definition of mentor in US English: mentornoun 1An experienced and trusted adviser. (经验丰富值得信赖的)导师;指导者 he was her friend and mentor until his death in 1915 直到1915年他去世为止,他一直是她的良师益友。 Example sentencesExamples - Pat was one of the mentors who guided, the ladies to the final of the Ulster Championship.
- Get friends and mentors, advisors you trust and bounce your ideas off them.
- My colleagues were my best friends, family, peers, confidantes and mentors.
- In these important years, many of us are either fortunate or wise enough to find mentors to help guide our decisions.
- He is our mentor, our guide, and he possesses an intellect the size of a planet.
- He was very encouraging and since then he has become a mentor and friend.
- He became my mentor and good friend and he was one of the world's great authorities on James Joyce.
- She has become not only my musical mentor but also a friend of mine and of my family.
- He was a great mentor and friend and he will be sadly missed by everyone who was lucky enough to know him well.
- She's a very dear friend and a great mentor and I really look up to her.
- His father is more than a customer, however, serving as a mentor and adviser to Daly.
- He was a kind, gracious, and generous friend, and a mentor beyond compare.
- It relies on a network of 160 volunteers acting as business mentors to advise clients and help develop the new enterprises.
- A group of mentors will guide refugees through their early months in the town in a scheme aimed at acclimatising them to life in their new home.
- Experienced mentors and script editors are attached to each project.
- But finding a guide, a coach, a friend, a mentor and a support unit, all wrapped up in the one person, is not going to be easy.
- He has been both a friend and a mentor to him guiding him thorough the course of his life.
- The latter was his mentor and friend, for whose editorial skills he always retained sincere admiration.
- Under the terms of the Trust, a mentor is to be provided for the successful students to assist and support them during their time at college.
- Back in Rome, he met Polybius, who became his friend and his mentor in preparing him for a public career.
Synonyms adviser, guide, confidant, confidante, counsellor, consultant, therapist - 1.1 An experienced person in a company, college, or school who trains and counsels new employees or students.
师傅;导师;指导者 Example sentencesExamples - Peer mentors also help students identify campus leadership opportunities and community service projects of interest.
- A good mentor can help a student or practitioner sort through the options and make decisions.
- As the report describes, the mentor program has contributed to the career advancement of protégés.
- The Year 9 mentors are trained by children's charity Childline and run lunchtime support clubs as well as a drop-in centre where younger students can call in for advice or help.
- The team train volunteers to become mentors on a whole range of topics including drugs and crime.
- Both schools have developed a peer support programme with the county council's behavioural support unit, where senior students are trained as mentors for younger students.
- Trained high school mentors actually facilitate the program, often speaking from their own painful experiences.
- They also use their own students as tutors, recruiters, and mentors for less experienced students.
- After four sessions with his mentor, the student was able to pass the course.
- Seniors, who quickly turn into mentors to the students, only require patience, a sense of humour and an empathy towards children.
- Anti-bullying charity Kidscape has trained 24 students to become peer mentors for new students.
- Students meet with mentors to go over academic success skills, such as planning, listening and test-taking strategies.
- It will not even allow me to say that I have been the best mentor and example for students, but I have always tried to be.
- There is also a new mentor program linking young people to adults to develop positive relationships outside their peer group.
- Some of the structures for on-the-job training - like mentors and coaches - are in place.
- They have both a counsellor service and mentors for students that need them.
- We want music teachers to be successful as pedagogues and as mentors to their students.
- It's a tale of the teacher mentor and student who learn from each other, but only in part.
- Selecting high school students as mentors can present unique challenges for program directors.
- The employees act as business mentors to provide a career related voice of experience for the student mentee.
Synonyms trainer, teacher, tutor, coach, instructor
verb [with object]Advise or train (someone, especially a younger colleague). 指导;培训(某人,尤指年龄更小的同事) Example sentencesExamples - I was mentored by a millionaire, and now I'm mentoring those who read the book.
- With all these requisite skills, most successful camp directors have been carefully mentored through the ranks.
- It says a new generation of leaders need to be mentored and trained, while collaborative work between groups could become a condition of funding.
- I met people there that were a little older, who mentored me.
- Using herself as an example, she said she mentored youngsters in her church and family before retiring.
- The older man had mentored the younger so expertly that Powell had become surplus to Charlton's requirements.
- When they are here we would like to make sure they are orientated and mentored both culturally, linguistically and also into the system in which they are working.
- It would be great for him to be mentored into working.
- Carol Adams wants automatic time out of the classroom so teachers can learn from and be mentored by experienced colleagues during their first five years.
- After the team goes through the initial training, they are continually being trained and mentored by peers and lead staff.
- He gets mentored and is advised and is on a six, rather than a five - year program.
- As a teacher, she has mentored many of the young singers coming to prominence, Clare Teal being one.
- How about giving a tutorial, or mentoring those of us that want to do more but just don't know how?
- Through the years he mentored many young doctors and nurses.
- Awarded to recognize a writer's entire body of work, the prize's terms also include having mentored other writers.
- He has worked very hard to make his way in the party, making his name by slogging it out in opposition rather than being mentored or having union connections to smooth his path.
- They are mentored through sporting and social activities ranging from rock climbing to basketball by more than 270 volunteers.
- Graduate students no longer feel like apprentices who are being mentored to join a scholarly guild.
- Now the 50 divisional heads are being mentored by junior managers.
- In the making of many of these sites, teens are being mentored and trained to create the kind of media they want.
OriginMid 18th century: via French and Latin from Greek Mentōr, the name of the adviser of the young Telemachus in Homer's Odyssey. |