apprenticeship

Language was opening me up in ways I couldn’t explain and I assumed it was part of the apprenticeship of a poet. (Jimmy Santiago Baca, A Place to Stand

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apprentice
c.1300, from O.Fr. aprentiz  "someone learning" (13c.), from aprendre  (Mod.Fr. apprendre ) "to learn, teach," contracted from L. apprehendere  (see apprehend). Aphetic form prentice  was long more usual in English. The verb is first attested 1630s. (www.dictionary.com)

apprenticeship





















Peace,
Milton