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
Butter knives The Cowboys are notably improved this season, but the real can’t-miss event comes afterward, when coach Sundance Wicks arrives for his postgame news conference.—Mark Zeigler, San Diego Union-Tribune, 16 Jan. 2026 After Strome’s goal, Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky tweaked two of his forward lines, dropping Igor Chernyshov to the third line with Michael Misa and Adam Gaudette and moving Regenda to the top line with Celebrini and Graf.—Curtis Pashelka, Mercury News, 16 Jan. 2026
Verb
After the ‘23 season, Cignetti accepted the head coaching job at Indiana University, and, because of the then-new lax transfer policy, took more than a dozen of his JMU players with him to Bloomington.—Mac Engel
january 9, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 9 Jan. 2026 Having coached the linebacker unit from 2020 to 2023, Anthony Campanile actually would be familiar face in the building.—Miami Herald, 9 Jan. 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