served as apperentices
because they were gay
They became apprentices for people who already knew the trade. They could also learn from their family.
thay would learn there trade by there boss person thing but they have to learn there trade for 7 to9 years
served as apperentices
their dumb
FALSE!
Keeps its young men a room to study and learn the Tellsons way until they are older and more matured.
To learn a trade during the Middle Ages, a boy would live with a person who is trained in a trade he desires to learn about. The boy lives and works with the trained person as an apprentice.
A person who works for another in order to learn the trade.
because, Fur trade in Canada began as an adjunct to the fishing industry. ... young men did not remain on the land but disappeared for years to trade with the Indians ...Each year up to 25 congés (licences to trade) were to be issued by the ... in New France down to the early years of the 18th century the trade was carried.
No
A person who learns a trade for a skilled member of that trade is often called an "apprentice." In the old days, before college and vocational schools, young men (and a few young women) would apprentice themselves to a skilled tradesman to learn to be a blacksmith, a silversmith, a glassblower, a carpenter, or other occupations. Today, there are still professions which require a combination of school and apprenticeship.