teaching pupils individually (usually by a tutor hired privately)
<noun.act>
attention and management implying responsibility for safety
<noun.act> he is in the care of a bodyguard
Tutelage \Tu"te*lage\, n. [L. tutela protection, fr. tutus safe, fr. tueri to watch, defend. Cf. {Tuition}.] 1. The act of guarding or protecting; guardianship; protection; as, the king's right of seigniory and tutelage.
The childhood of the European nations was passed under the tutelage of the clergy. --Macaulay.
2. The state of being under a guardian; care or protection enjoyed. --V. Knox.
"Under his tutelage NYU basically went from a commuter school, with most of our students coming from the metropolitan New York area, and became a major national research university," Renzulli said.
The shares were then placed under the tutelage of Mr Palladino for 22 days. During this period a deal was worked out between Mr Gardini on the one hand and ENI and its political masters on the other.
The 47-year-old electrical engineer has developed a reputation as a skilled high-tech investor and has "had some great tutelage," says Phillip Horsley of Horsley Keogh & Associates.
"He could double for Woody," she said, smiling and crying. "It took somebody to come in and put it together." Some of the songs performed at the Crystal Theater were composed by youngsters under Long's tutelage.
The pity is that we will never see how this particular group would have developed under her tutelage.
The Clintons covered most of these connections one way or another and their state prospered, relatively, under their tutelage.
Under the tutelage of Mr Chris Patten, now governor of Hong Kong, he immediately chose the centre-left as his more natural political home. Now, after fighting them over Europe for most of the past three years, he has once again embraced the right.
For college, he shuttled south to Princeton, where he came under the tutelage of an economics department curiously devoid of Keynesians.
The Bush strategists said they believe Mr. Quayle's performance will improve, especially because he will be under the tutelage of Stuart Spencer, a veteran political operative who has been assigned to travel with him and coach him in his new role.
Shayevich, who some Jews say is under the tutelage of the government, told reporters he believes most Soviet Jews who want to leave have already emigrated.