rare. [f. TUTOR sb. + -HOOD.] The condition or office of a tutor, tutorship; also, † a society or body of tutors.

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1752.  H. Walpole, Lett. (1845), II. 455. Storms gathering in the tutorhood [of Prince George]. Ibid. (a. 1797), Mem. Geo. II. (1847), I. x. 298. The dissensions in the tutorhood had been carried so high.

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1882.  H. C. Merivale, Faucit of B., I. I. v. 91. Faucit…, after six years of tutorhood,… had made up his mind to leave the place and the life.

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