35 adjectives to describe adults

No male adult Jew, or child, can leave the ports of Morocco, without paying four dollars customs duty.

The sex life of the unmarried adult; an inquiry into and an interpretation of current sex practices.

Of these two hundred and fifty-nine thousandI give only round numbersthere were thirty-six thousand eight hundred old or infirm; there were nearly ninety-eight thousand able-bodied adults receiving parochial relief, and there were under sixteen years of age nearly twenty-four thousand persons.

YOUNG, ALICE K. The Young way to correct English for busy adults.

The creative adult.

At birth the rate is about 140 times a minute, in early infancy, 120 or upwards, in the healthy adult between 65 and 75, the most common number being 72.

Miss Beecher, the daughter of Dr. Beecher, having devoted to the subject much time and talent, tells us that there are in the United States "a million adults who cannot read and write, and more than two millions of children utterly illiterate and entirely without schools!" Of the children in this condition, 130,000 are in Ohio, and 100,000 in Kentucky.

He was likewise one of the overseers of a school for colored children, established by Anthony Benezet; and it was his constant practice, for several years, to teach two or three nights every week, in a school for colored adults, established by a society of young men.

If strictly classified among the institutions of the city, it might be termed, "A school for female adults in good circumstances, whose early education had been neglected.

But every mother and nurse knows how hard it is to meet the demands of a child too young to be taught to read, but whose opening intelligence and irrepressible bodily activity are so hard to be met by an adult, however genial and active.

If warm, six ounces is as much as a hearty adult ought to eat of it at once; and children should of course take much less.

The great political conceptions that are needed to establish the peace of the world must become the common property of the mass of intelligent adults if they are to hold against the political scoundrel, the royal adventurer, the forensic exploiter, the enemies and scatterers of mankind.

At watering- places, or on the "commons" or suburban playgrounds of large towns, he is brought out in a handsome saddle, or a well got-up little carriage, and let by the hour or by the ride to invalid adults, or to children bubbling over with life.

It was a forlorn-looking lot of hovels, occupied by listless, frowsy adults and noisy children.

Adj. adolescent, pubescent, of age; of full age, of ripe age; out of one's teens, grown up, mature, full grown, in one's prime, middle-aged, manly, virile, adult; womanly, matronly; marriageable, nubile.

It is very unfortunate that the child in the past has been regarded as a miniature adult and treated like "a little man.

Crying has been called the "waste gate" of the human system; the door of escape to that excess of excitability which sometimes prevails, especially among children and nervous adults.

" When we examine the intellectual ability of normal adults we do so by means of tests that require close concentration of attention.

Adj. adolescent, pubescent, of age; of full age, of ripe age; out of one's teens, grown up, mature, full grown, in one's prime, middle-aged, manly, virile, adult; womanly, matronly; marriageable, nubile.

The child's romancing is not intended as assertion, although so taken by prosaic adults.

She took the one desperate course open to her, and ran out of the room, to the astonishment of three puzzled and rather frightened adults.

But every rational adult has a governing power: namely, that of governing himself.

The home and the school may teach convincingly the injurious effects of tobacco and alcohol, but so long as society sanctions the sale of these poisons and respected adults indulge in them, just so long will the efforts of home and school, be, to a large extent, counteracted.

It made a wondrously snug fit for two; the both of us being full-sized adults at that.

Then the vanquished adults, the women and children, reduced to slavery, are sold by the vanquishers for a few yards of calico, some powder, a few firearms, pink or red pearls, and often even, as Livingstone says, in periods of famine, for a few grains of maize.

35 adjectives to describe  adults