nonce-wd. [f. TUTOR sb. + -DOM.] The occupation of a tutor; tutorship.

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1834.  [F. D. Maurice], Eustace Conway, III. iv. 44. I have not that firm faith in the miracles to be wrought by education, which I had when I entered upon my tutordom.

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1840.  Blackw. Mag., XLVIII. 124. He then betook himself … to tutordom and secretaryship.

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1888.  Oxford Mag., VI. 8 May, 336/2. Will not every future St. Arnaud of the Quads, or Boulanger of Junior Common Rooms, lead his minions to the assault on effete Tutordom with the sound of inspiring strains from the maundering mandoline or the bounding banjo?

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1922.  Shane Leslie, The Oppidan, vii. 84. Mr. Socston was brimming with memories of his own Tutor, ‘Billy’ Johnson, whom he insisted was the paragon of all Tutordom.

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