1182 Verbs to Use for the Word child

The head nurse (English) who takes entire charge of her nursery, who doesn't like any interference, and brings the children to their mother at stated hours, doesn't exist in France.

She cried a little, said nothing, kissed Edith more than usual, and took the children away for longer walks and drives.

He dared not leave the child until he came back.

We have myriads of Sabbath-school teachers, but how many men or women really know how to teach a little child?

"A poor woman in Utica, who owns three houses and is building another, sends her children into the streets daily to beg.

In his practice, he sees many other frail children, and it occurs to him that they, too, can be benefited by the same kind of care and watchfulness that he is giving his own child.

They were confiding, affectionate, loving little children, and my heart warmed towards them, as I saw them waltzing and dancing and skipping about under the green foliage of the trees.

As the people rushed together to the exciting scene they were horrified to find at one of the upper windows a girl, clad only in her night-dress, bearing in her arms a child, and crying for help.

But a few old clients lingered on, chiefly women who carried children in their arms and old men without neckties who came to him for free advice.

And look here, Bruce, leave it to me to tell the children.

His companion turned his head sharply just in time to see Sister Winifred come last into the church, holding by either hand a little child.

In the cultivation of my farmin educating our children, a son and two daughters, in reading, music, paintingand in occasional visits to our friends in New-York and Philadelphia, seventeen years glided swiftly and imperceptibly away; at the end of which time death, in depriving me of an excellent wife, made a wreck of my hopes and enjoyments.

During the night he entered the house of the Jew and found a child in the cradle.

A few months later a big storm tore off the roof of her house and again she was soaked as she worked to save the children.

It is a mad extravagance, for instance, to kill with autos children at play in the streets.

"I have some thoughts," she says, "of increasing by degrees my plan for Sunday evening, and of having several poor children, at least, to read in the Testament and religious books for an hour.

In order to lead the child to the handling of material we give him the ball, the cube and other bodies, the Kindergarten gifts.

It is to them as if they had lost their child.

She was a great help to us, as she knew all the children, their ages, and what they would like.

In his practice, he sees many other frail children, and it occurs to him that they, too, can be benefited by the same kind of care and watchfulness that he is giving his own child.

The trained nurse will be far more use in detecting and attending to the ailments of children than the teacher can be, and the motherly woman can give far more efficient help in training children to decent habits than any young probationer, useful though these may be.

She fed the children and put them to bed.

The strongest reason for keeping children back from books is a physiological one.

He maintained that they would stoop just as much in gardening, and washing and nursing their children, as in sewing; and that we were not such frail or unpliant machines as to be seriously injured, unless we persisted in one set of straight, formal notions, but that we were adapted to variety, and were benefited by it.

She says she will not do itit is not a proper place in which to raise her children.

1182 Verbs to Use for the Word  child