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- expressions - If an adult gets kidnapped, would it still be considered . . .
What's the other terms if adults get kidnap?
- single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I have three age groups that I want to distinguish in my research project They are as follows: 18-45 years - I have called this group young adults 46-65 years - I have called this group adults 66
- Can Mr, Mrs, etc. be used with a first name?
The best example is a children's Sunday School class: I know a "Mr Joe" who goes by that name because he's been teaching SS forever, so there is a whole generation of people who call him that, even as adults, since they can't drop the habit
- Word that describes some entertainment as being aimed at adults without . . .
Is there a word that refers to any form of entertainment being made for adults specifically to enjoy (rather than aimed at children) that doesn't imply that it's not appropriate for children? Words
- What is the word for an adult who is not mature?
What term can be used for an adult, especially a man, who is in his forties and still behaves like a teenager, shunning responsibilities typical of mature people, preferring to enjoy himself?
- meaning - Does adults aged X–Y include people born between Y and Y+1 . . .
Sometimes people use age ranges to define groups of people, like quot;young adults are defined as people aged 18—30 quot; To me that sounds ambiguous: imagine for example, that Alice is born on J
- Referring to adult-age sons and daughters as children
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"
- Adult children? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
"Adult children" comes from "adult children of alcoholics", but now has broader reference to adults who were abused emotionally, physically or sexually in childhood
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