child
Pronunciation
changeNoun
change- (countable) A child is a young person, usually older than a baby but younger than a teenager.
- The children were playing in the park.
- Most three-year-old children speak very well.
- Even as a child of six, I knew what hard work was.
- Taking care of young children is difficult work.
- This kind of teaching is useful for all children, not just those children with learning disabilities.
- We need to do a better job of educating our children.
- We're collecting food for needy children.
- (countable) A child is the son or daughter of someone.
- I am my mother's child in every way.
- My eldest child is now a doctor.
- I drove a motorcycle until my children were born.
- (countable) A child of a particular time, situation, or idea is a person who is strongly influenced by it.
- As a child of the 90s, I grew up with computers.
- There isn't actually that much anger among children of divorce.
- (countable) A child is the product or result of something.
- This book is the child of an earlier generation of grammatical theory.
- Anthropology is the child of Western colonialism.
- The very idea of a garden is the child of water.
- If a woman is with child, she is pregnant.
- She told no one about the sex, even when she realized she was with child.
- (countable) (technical) A child in a tree structure is piece of data, process or object with a role or position closer to the root.
Synonyms
change- (young person): kid, baby, youth, adolescent, teen, infant, teenager
- (son or daughter): kid, son, daughter, offspring
- (result of something): result, product, creation, outcome
Antonyms
changeRelated words
change
Members of a family (edit) |
parent: father - mother | spouse: husband - wife | child: son - daughter | sibling: brother - sister | uncle | aunt | nephew - niece | cousin | grandparent: grandfather - grandmother | grandchild: grandson - granddaughter |