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Answer for the clue "Training for a new occupation ", 10 letters:
retraining

Alternative clues for the word retraining

Word definitions for retraining in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. New or different training, or training in a new field vb. (present participle of retrain English)

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Retraining is an adventure story arc of the Philippine comic strip series Pugad Baboy , created by Pol Medina Jr. and originally published in the Philippine Daily Inquirer . This particular story arc lasts 45 strips long. In 1993, the story arc was reprinted ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. training for a new occupation

Usage examples of retraining.

And so, Jim, the retraining of left-handed children to become right-handed -- in complete contradiction to the orders the poor kids' brains are issuing to their muscles -- badly bollixes up their central nervous systems, and, among other bad outcomes, is the direct and only cause of habitual stuttering.

This treatment, the first of many, was supposed to start retraining his brain to reduce beta wave production, bringing his rhythms in line with the normal range.

In all the talk about the need for continuing education, in all the popular discussions of retraining, there is an assumption that man's potentials for re-education are unlimited.

Sherman had been doing animal experimentations on memory, on the retention of skills once learned, of retraining time when such skills were forgotten.

He had mastered feistier beasts to the saddle, and he must-if he wished to Hold-prove equally capable at retraining.

No press release was ever issued expressing compassionate concern for the unemployed mad scientists of Wyvern or announcing a retraining program, and since many of them resided on base and had little community involvement, no locals wondered where they had gone.

The fact that such a plant might sharply alter labor patterns, that within a decade it might throw men out of work, force large-scale retraining of workers, and swell the social welfare costs of a nearby city--such considerations are too remote in time to concern them.