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Origin and history of tutee

tutee(n.)

"pupil of a tutor," 1927; see tutor (v.) + -ee.

Entries linking to tutee

"have guardianship or care of; act as a tutor to, instruct, teach," 1590s, from tutor (n.). Related: Tutored; tutoring.

word-forming element in legal English (and in imitation of it), representing the Anglo-French ending of past participles used as nouns (compare -y (3)). As these sometimes were coupled with agent nouns in -or, the two suffixes came to be used as a pair to denote the initiator and the recipient of an action.

Not to be confused with the French -ée that is a feminine noun ending (as in fiancée), which is from Latin -ata.

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    Trends of tutee

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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