Noun
a track star who has been working with a new coach
In those days, people usually traveled long distances in coaches. Verb
He coaches the tennis star.
He has coached the team for several years.
She coached the U.S. gymnastics team at the Olympics.
He has coached at the college level for many years.
The lawyer admitted to coaching the witness.
It was clear that the witness had been coached by her lawyer on how to answer the questions.
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Noun
Video replay showed Balogun was clearly off, and there wasn’t much debate from head coach Mauricio Pochettino and his sideline staff either in this case.—
Scott Thompson,
FOXNews.com,
2 July 2026 The coach also praised his players for keeping their emotions in check after the red card and other decisions by the officiating crew.—Miami Herald,
2 July 2026
Verb
The 16-man team will be coached by Lakers assistant coach Ty Abbott and begin summer league play Friday against the Golden State Warriors at Chase Center.—Los Angeles Times,
2 July 2026 Interpretation platforms like Entrain by Hypothesis Forge, Sensie and Meo Health layer coaching on top of existing sensors, and some work without a dedicated wearable at all.—
Samantha Agate,
Kansas City Star,
2 July 2026 See All Example Sentences for coach
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English coche, from Middle French, from German Kutsche, from Hungarian kocsi (szekér), literally, wagon from Kocs, Hungary