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  • Is grownup, grown up, or grown-up the correct usage (as a noun)?
    4 Grown-up is the proper noun and adjective form Grown up is the past participle of to grow up Grownup is a frequently used form, but more dictionaries prefer grown-up In fact, if you google grownup definition it returns a definition for grown-up One source of many
  • Are there sentimental connotations to the phrase all grown up?
    The phrase "all grown up" sounds even more cute and child-like than "grown up" So if you said to a 19-year-old who you haven't seen in several years: Look at you! You're all grown up! it would probably be meant as a joke, because you're talking to him as if he were a child The 19-year-old probably wouldn't think it was that funny [PhraseMix]
  • Specific word for grown-up children? [duplicate]
    Is there a specific word for adult offspring? If all of your "children" are now in their adulthood, is there a specific word to refer to them?
  • expressions - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What's the other terms if adults get kidnap?
  • Word that describes some entertainment as being aimed at adults without . . .
    Netflix uses the term "kids" There's often also a "family" category that's of interest to grown-ups (there's a term you might use!) but also suitable and enjoyable for children Programs for children often have some content that appeals to adults but is assumed to go over the heads of the children
  • Referring to adult-age sons and daughters as children
    As AndrewGrimm notes, "children" has two very distinct meanings: It can refer to people who are not yet adults, or it can refer to people who are the offspring of a specified person or people It is normal and common to refer to adults as "children" when expressing the relationship Saying that so-and-so are the "children of" someone is another way of saying the "sons and or daughters of" For
  • Is “un-grown-up” a common, or not so common word?
    Curiously enough however, Kenkyusha’s Readers English Japanese Dictionary published by a leading Japanese foreign language dictionary specialist publisher carries "ungrown" as an adjective meaning “not grown up, immature, or childish ” Is “un-grown-up” a common, or not so common, or taken-for-granted word?
  • Whats the difference between fake it ‘til you make it and fake it . . .
    They are always pretending to be grown-ups – playing soldiers, playing shop But all the time, they are hardening their muscles and sharpening their wits so that the pretence of being grown-up helps them to grow up in earnest ” It’s the motivation that matters; are you passing yourself off as something, or trying to become that thing?
  • How to degender separate the men from the boys?
    I like the pair grown ups kids or grown ups children Here’s an example from Oxford Learner’s Dictionary (go to “noun” and click on “More examples sentences”; emphasis mine): ‘In a festival where easy laughs are mostly the order of the day, this is a serious piece of work that separates the grown-ups from the kids ’ And another example from The Business Insider (2014
  • meaning - Are adult and adulterate cognates? - English Language . . .
    16 The word adult appear to have derived from the Latin term adultus, meaning grown up, mature, adult, ripe Adulterate (and its cognate adultery) is reported to derive from the Latin adulterare - to falsify, corrupt Are the meanings and derivation of adult and adulterate, directly related, or is this just a coincidence of spelling?





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