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"babyhood" Definitions
  1. the period of your life when you are a baby
"babyhood" Antonyms

55 Sentences With "babyhood"

How to use babyhood in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "babyhood" and check conjugation/comparative form for "babyhood". Mastering all the usages of "babyhood" from sentence examples published by news publications.

My children are now older, mercifully many years away from babyhood.
Self-tying can mimic a comfort strategy that goes back to babyhood.
It starts from babyhood, with onesies featuring pretty princesses and future presidents.
I have two children now, one in preschool and the other scrambling inexorably out of babyhood.
We've gathered up our favorite nine wooden toys and games for every age from babyhood through adulthood.
My mother dug her own holes, and nursed trees and shrubs from babyhood to their full glory.
It's also developmentally appropriate for children to change their eating habits as they grow from babyhood, said Satter.
It's a glorified PowerPoint, tracking the Chainsmokers in photos and video clips from babyhood, through their awkward teenage years, and into the present.
By manifesting babyhood and smolness, I continue to grasp at curling tendrils of childhood—a time when I did not know my own name
There's really such a difference of babyhood into childhood and now  I look forward to my time alone with her 'cause she's just a fun pal to be around.
It was absolutely awful, but soon afterward my dear cousin picked through the wreckage and found my cherished stuffed sheep, Baa, (who I had had since babyhood) totally intact.
Nuna MIXX2 Three Mode Stroller, $449.95 (originally $599.95) [You save $150]Durable enough to hold children up to 50 pounds, this stroller can be used from babyhood to toddlerdom.
Insofar as there's a main character, it's Franny, who after babyhood becomes an avid reader, drops out of law school, dates a successful novelist and remains devoted to her family.
It's a way of thinking about eating that takes you back to babyhood, when you ate what you wanted for as long as you wanted and when full, turned away.
They will pay stiffer costs as adults in lost intellectual capacity, and a number of studies suggest that at least some violence by young men is tied to high levels of lead in babyhood.
I am less and less sure of who I am even as the self I built up in adolescence and early adulthood has been given back, a complicated reward for surviving my daughter's babyhood.
These misshapen cells get stuck in veins and arteries, blocking the flow of blood that carries life-giving oxygen to the body and causing the disease's horrifying hallmark: episodes of agony that begin in babyhood.
In fact, the state of eternal babyhood it implies seems to have spun out into all-encompassing cultural obsession, from "Sanrio-core" meme pages and "kidcore" aesthetic accounts, to brands selling plushies for grown-ups.
Since there are so many kinds of pacifiers available now, choosing the right one for each stage and circumstance of babyhood can be confusing, but we did the research, consulted the trusted sources, and tested over a dozen kinds on my daughter.
By Philip Pullman (Knopf, $22.99.) Pullman's long-awaited prequel to the "His Dark Materials" trilogy pulls you back into the fascinating alternate universe of the original series, exploring the nature of the powerful substance called Dust and following the heroine, Lyra Belacqua, from babyhood.
A precocious big sister enumerates the discommodious nature of babyhood in this sassy tale.
Babyhood is regarded as a critical period in personality development because it is the time when the foundations of adult personality are laid." In contrast toddler is used to denote a baby that has achieved relative independence, in moving about, and feeding.Developmental Psychology. p. 121 1998 "However, Hurlock (1982) cites that infancy, compared to babyhood, is characterized by extreme helplessness.
Reiser has written three books: Couplehood, about the ups and downs of being in a committed relationship; Babyhood, about his experiences as a first-time father; and Familyhood (released in May 2011), a collection of humorous essays. Couplehood is unique in that it starts on page 145; Reiser explained this as his method of giving the reader a false sense of accomplishment. In 1996, Reiser appeared on Late Show with David Letterman in the middle of writing Babyhood. Since he had not yet decided on a title, he presented a prop book, titled simply "Book" and with the same cover as that of Couplehood.
Her journal contributions included the Ladies' Home Journal, Mail and Express, Epoch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Journalist, Union Signal, Babyhood, Golden Days, and a score of others. In addition to her family obligations and literary work, Amory often held classes at home and in the schoolroom, including classes in music.
In 1917, just after his pulp stories began appearing, he founded and published a newspaperman's magazine, The Deadline. A year later he joined Fairchild Publications, and later worked for Modern Publications. In 1923 he founded Babyhood, the only infants and maternity magazine in the United States at that time.
This was the 17th anniversary of Alice's own father's death. Marie also died, but the rest of the siblings survived. After her mother and sister's deaths, Alix became more reserved and withdrawn. She described her childhood before her mother and sister's death as "unclouded, happy babyhood, of perpetual sunshine, then of a great cloud".
During the battle, Carla's father is killed. Shortly after the battle, Carla breaks up with Jake. Later, the Guardian faces down killer robots modeled after the world's ethnic groups. Fed up with how his new job has changed his life, Jake storms Ed's office, intent on quitting, only to find Ed is an elderly man who never physically developed beyond babyhood.
"Pinkie" Barnes (18 April 1915 - 14 September 2012) was an English international table tennis champion.Pinkie Barnes obituary, Daily Telegraph, 4 October 2012. Accessed 2 November 2012 She was born Lavender Rosamund Marguerite Barnes, the nickname 'Pinkie' apparently referring to her babyhood complexion. Pinkie did not like the short forms of any of her three Christian names and was keen to be called a nickname.
Teresa Rodriguez (born January 31, 1969) is a travel writer who wrote Fly Solo: The 50 Best Places on Earth for a Girl to Travel AloneReview by Allison Firestone and founded a social network for women travelers. Teresa's father is from Mexico and her mother is American. Teresa is the oldest of three children. Her younger sister suffered from babyhood from herpes encephalitis, using a wheelchair, and then dying at 11.
Identical twins Shawn and Taylor Carpenter originally played Will. They were only six weeks old when they started, and they portrayed Will from babyhood until six years old (1995 to 2002). In 2002, Days decided they wanted a trained young actor playing Will, and nine-year-old Darian Weiss was cast, and the character was rapidly-aged three years. A year later (2003), Christopher Gerse took over as Will.
The school from its babyhood was located in a private rented building up to 1961. The government building was completed in 1961 and after that the school is housed in that building. It consists of a grand building having a Drawing Hall, Laboratory Hall, Meeting Hall, Headmaster's Office, Office Room, Staff Room, Water Hut and 10 Class Rooms. This school has produced so may famous authors and novelists.
Perhaps the first concrete remembrance of my babyhood was, at the age of three, a trip to New York with my parents to visit my Aunt Mary for whose daughter I was named. My Aunt Mary was a sister-in-law of George Graham, the publisher of Graham's Magazine, which accounts for the Graham in my cousin Annie's name and mine. I never saw the cousin. She died before my advent in North America.
This combination contrasts with the scary dark news of mass information. On the other side of the screen there are someone else's disasters like airplane crashes, famines, arms race, etc.; those gloomy events underscore the joy of entertainment, game, freedom and intuitive good guesses. Life, ideally, is shaped as a sequence of stages: carefree babyhood; studying for the sake of future earnings; earnings; and, thanks to the earnings, carefree idleness after retirement.
This would allow women to participate in the workforce and lead a more worldly life. Gilman believed that women could desire home and family life, but should not have to retain complete responsibility of these areas. Gilman stated that these changes would eventually result in “better motherhood and fatherhood, better babyhood and childhood, better food, better homes, better society.”Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Women and Economics (New York: Source Book Press, 1970) p. 317.
Princess Komala Saovabha or Phra Chao Boromwongse Ther Phra Ong Chao Komala Saovamala (RTGS: Komon Saowaman; ) (19 September 1887 - 19 April 1890), was the Princess of Siam (later Thailand. She was a member of Siamese Royal Family. She is a daughter of Chulalongkorn, King Rama V of Siam and Chao Chom Manda Wong. She died in her babyhood on 19 April 1890, at the age of only 2 years and 7 months.
The couple lived in Chicago, Illinois, and after about 1875, in Brooklyn, New York. It was not till the youngest was beyond babyhood did she touch literary work again. Toward the latter part of this domestic period, she began to write an occasional letter to a paper, when feelings grew too strong for silence. It was then she assumed the name Olive Thorne, and later when the pseudonym was somewhat widely known, and the possession of two names became inconvenient, she added her own married name Miller.
As described in a film magazine, Alice Vanni (Dalton), daughter of dancing master Professor Vanni (Lang) and prima donna Mrs. Martyn (Anderson), who abandoned her husband during the child's babyhood to go her selfish way, is sent after the death of her father to stay with her mother whom she has not known. With the aid of her cohort Louis Fitch (Dawson), the mother plans a wealthy marriage for the young woman in ambition of repairing her own fortunes. To further this plan the trio go abroad.
Among people who stayed there were painter Ilya Repin, writer Ivan Turgenev, painter Mikhail Vrubel, and sculptor Mark Antokolsky. It was a comfortable place for artists not only to gather and discuss important topics, but to live and create. Valentin Serov knew Vera Mamontova from her babyhood, as he frequently visited Mamontov's Abramtsevo estate, and sometimes he even lived there for lengthy periods of time. Serov later recalled, In 1887 the painting won first prize at the Exhibition of the Moscow Society of Lovers of Art.
This has led to the often-deprecatory adjective, "Rockwellesque". Consequently, Rockwell is not considered a "serious painter" by some contemporary artists, who regard his work as bourgeois and kitsch. Writer Vladimir Nabokov stated that Rockwell's brilliant technique was put to "banal" use, and wrote in his book Pnin: "That Dalí is really Norman Rockwell's twin brother kidnapped by Gypsies in babyhood". He is called an "illustrator" instead of an artist by some critics, a designation he did not mind, as that was what he called himself.
As he waits to be taken by aliens to the planet Tralfamadore, the protagonist, Billy Pilgrim, watches a war movie backwards. American planes full of holes fly backwards as German planes suck bullets from them; bombers take their bombs back to base where they are returned to the States, reduced to ore and buried. The American fliers became high school kids again, and, Billy guesses, Hitler ultimately returns to babyhood. Julia Alvarez's novel How the García Girls Lost Their Accents (1991) opens in 1989 with one of the characters returning to her native Dominican Republic.
She served as Principal of the Gipsey Hill Teachers College for 29 years. She published several books that were widely regarded including Life in the Nursery School (1939) and Life in the Nursery School and in Early Babyhood (1949). Lillian de Lissa was invited on a lecture tour of the United States for six months in 1943, at the invitation of organisations including the Child Study Association of America and the Progressive Education Association. In 1955, de Lissa returned to Adelaide for the Kindergarten Union of South Australia's Golden Jubilee.
Her love for children led her to write for them, and in their behalf, she contributed both prose and verse to St. Nicholas Magazine, Wide Awake, Our Little Ones, The Nursery, Babyhood, and other periodicals devoted to the young. Her work showed not only true poetic gifts, but also careful thinking and proper attention to form. Her poems were clear-cut and finely polished. On September 22, 1891, she married Charles Alvan Pope, F. R. G. S., author, of Valparaiso, Chile, and she made that city her permanent home.
New York: Houghin Mifflin Company, 1998. 259. An 1888 issue of The Cosmopolitan featured a story about President Andrew Jackson, in which Jackson, touring the eastern United States in 1833, presented a baby to U.S. Secretary of War John Eaton to kiss. In 1886, the magazine Babyhood reported that most presidents of the United States had accepted "kissing babies as an official duty". In the 1890s, Elizabeth Cady Stanton criticized the practice on the basis of hygiene and children's rights, and praised President Benjamin Harrison for refraining from it.
As described in a film magazine, Alice (Reed), who innocently uses a surname not her own, becomes engaged to Eugene La Salle (Desmond), whom she meets following an automobile accident. He attends a house party at the home of her benefactor Tom Davis (Francis), a man whose love for her mother Helen (Reed) allowed him to raise her from babyhood. On a moonlit night the passion between Alice and Eugene overcomes their patience. Eugene goes abroad for a few months and on his return finds that Alice is pregnant.
I inherited > a tenacious memory, to which from babyhood upwards I committed particulars > of numerous events and incidents, tales and songs: once my observations … > were … committed to memory, nothing has been able to dispossess me of them. This memory served his interests in bellringing and singing well and provided the material for the Reminiscences. Albery describes him as "an honest and bold Freethinker"Burstow (1911), 4 and he was remembered in Horsham as an admirer of Darwin and an atheist. Local tradition tells that when reproached by the Rev.
While most of the book is laid against the concrete historical background of 16th Century society - often depicted in its most earthy and ribald aspects - the plot includes some aspects of fantasy. In babyhood Thyl needs a wet nurse, since his mother is unable to feed him. This service is provided by a neighbor who happens to be a witch with actual, manifest magic powers - a white witch who never uses her powers to harm others. The witch' daughter Nelle, Thyl's contemporary who would grow up to be his beloved and eventually his wife, shares in her mother's powers.
Shirley Temple BlackWhile Temple occasionally used "Jane" as a middle name, her birth certificate reads "Shirley Temple". Her birth certificate was altered to prolong her babyhood shortly after she signed with Fox in 1934; her birth year was advanced from 1928 to 1929. Even her baby book was revised to support the 1929 date. She confirmed her true age when she was 21 (Burdick 5; Edwards 23n, 43n). (April 23, 1928 – February 10, 2014) was an American actress, singer, dancer, businesswoman, and diplomat who was Hollywood's number one box-office draw as a child actress from 1935 to 1938.
Jacky Daydream is an autobiographical book about Jacqueline Wilson's childhood, first published in 2007. The book's title refers to a nickname given to the author when she was at school. The teacher, Mr Branson (who the children nicknamed Brandy Balls) would give all the children nicknames according to their character; initially he rather cruelly dubbed her "Jacky Four-eyes" when she came to school in glasses, subsequently he named her "Jacky Daydream" for staring out of the window during maths, a subject she hated. The book details her very early life, from babyhood to the summer she was 11, when she is about to start at secondary school.
Bender and Chernack published their first book in 2010, titled Awkward Family Photos. After this first publication, they continued with several other books, including Awkward Family Pet Photos in 2011, Awkward Family Holiday Photos in 2013, Born to Be Awkward: Celebrating Those Imperfect Moments of Babyhood in 2015, and Everything is Awkward in 2016. Soon after publishing their first book, they began developing board games, such as Awkward Family Photos and The Awkward Family Photos Movie Line Caption Game. Among their standard books and board games, they also have two different postcard books, a coloring book for adults, and a day to day calendar for 2019.
In a major change, Mrs. Brown, who was multi-talented, intelligent and suspicious in the pilot, became decidedly more scatterbrained. Bill Bixby in a 1965 episode when a malfunction takes Uncle Martin back to babyhood The first two seasons were filmed in black-and-white (at Desilu), but the final season was shot in color (at MGM), resulting in minor changes in the set and the format of the show. In addition to the extraterrestrial powers indicated in the first two seasons, Martin was able to do much more in the final season, such as stimulating beard growth to provide Tim and himself with quick disguises, and levitating using his nose.
In 1959 Dozier left CBS-TV, and took over as vice-president in charge of production at Screen Gems, replacing Irving Briskin. After founding a new company in 1964, Greenway Productions, he took on the development of the Batman television series (1966–1968),Bat-Mania Site: William Dozier Interview as executive producer and narrator, although he was uncredited for the role as narrator. He also performed those functions on The Green Hornet television show, which starred Van Williams and Bruce Lee, although here the narration was limited to the opening, the next-episode trailers, and the story-so-far recaps in its three two-part episodes. The Green Hornet gave Bruce Lee his first acting role in an American TV or film production, although he had appeared in Hong Kong-based films from his babyhood.
Meeting the mothers of both the rich and the poor, and seeing the great need of intelligent care in bringing up little children, she began a large correspondence with others. Her devotion to the children of the Foundling Hospital in Washington, and the great hygienic reformation she brought about, gave that institutional record of no deaths among its residents during the six months she acted as a member of its executive board of officers. Frequent inquiries from mothers desiring information on hygienic subjects relating to children suggested the idea of a series of nursery talks to mothers and the fitting up of a model nursery in tier residence, where every accessory of babyhood could be practically presented. "Nursery Talks" were inaugurated by a "Nursery Tea," and 500 women from official and leading circles were present.
Childhood: Its Care and Culture (1892) While serving as Illinois state president of the WCTU, and traveling throughout the state, the knowledge she gained of the inner life of thousands of homes, together with her intimate studies of children in the schoolroom, efficiently supplemented her natural bias for the task of writing her book for mothers, Childhood, its Care and Culture. It was published by the Woman's Temperance Association of Chicago in 1892. In it, the author claimed that the book "has grown naturally out of the rich soil of a thousand homes," which was interpreted to mean that the author wrote from experience and observation and not from mere theory. The contents were varied, including chapters on the child's body, babyhood, childhood, boyhood and girlhood, children's rights, work and play, amusements, behavior, domestic economy, family government, practical health hints, and other topics.
After this series ended its run, a new series was spun off entitled Clifford's Puppy Days, chronicling Clifford's youth as a tiny puppy before his family's relocation to Bridwell Island, the setting of the original animated program. Here, new characters are presented that appeared neither in the original storybooks nor the other series, such as Emily Elizabeth's neighbors and local animals and pets acquainted with Clifford during his babyhood. Such characters include Jorge (voiced by Jess Harnell), a Spanish dachshund owned by Emily's friend Nina (voiced by Masiela Lusha), Daffodil (voiced by Kath Soucie), a pink pet rabbit owned by Emily, Norville (voiced by Henry Winkler), a bird, among others. In the animated reboot, Clifford is portrayed as a playful and helpful dog who can talk to Emily Elizabeth, similar to the home video series in 1988 and unlike the original television series, and joins her to embark on adventures and explore their home island.
Horrified, she completely vanishes from existence following the events of Matilda's practical joke, leaving her house and worldly possessions to her niece, without any information established relating to her current whereabouts. After the position of headmaster is overtaken by a different teacher, Matilda is relocated to the year six classroom (which was one of the many preventions standing in her way during Miss Trunchbull's tyranny, due to her particular hatred for especially young children and doubts regarding Matilda's genius intelligence), but finds herself unable to summon her psychokinesis one day. Miss Honey suggests that, after her promotion to the year six class, all of the intellect remaining unused in reception was now being exercised, so as a result Matilda had lost her gift. (However, in the movie, although Matilda ceases using her telekinetic ability quite as frequently as before but because of the more frequent use of her knowledge, she still continues to use it on occasion, whereas in the book she seems to lose it entirely.) Aside from this, Matilda also specializes in the fields of reading and multiplication, having developed an astounding vocabulary and intellect during babyhood that went ignored because of her parents' immense ignorance.

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