child
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English
[edit ]Pronunciation
[edit ]- IPA (key): /ˈtʃaɪld/, [ˈt͡ʃhaɪ̯ɫd]
- (Australian , New Zealand ) IPA (key): /ˈt͡ʃɑɪ̯ld/, [ˈt͡ʃhɑ̟ɪ̯ld]; /ˈt͡ʃɒ̈ɪ̯ld/, [ˈt͡ʃɒ̈ɪ̯ld]
- (Southern US , General South African , /aɪ̯/-ungliding ) IPA (key): /ˈt͡ʃaːld/, [ˈt͡ʃhaːld]
- Rhymes: -aɪld
- Hyphenation: child
- Homophone: childe
Etymology 1
[edit ]From Middle English child , from Old English ċild , from Proto-West Germanic *kilþ , *kelþ , from Proto-Germanic *kelþaz ("womb; fetus "), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵelt- ("womb "), perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *gel- ("to ball up, amass").
Cognate with Danish kuld ("brood, litter "), Swedish kull ("brood, litter "), Icelandic kelta , kjalta ("lap "), Gothic 𐌺𐌹𐌻𐌸𐌴𐌹 (kilþei, "womb "), Sanskrit जर्त (jarta), जर्तु (jártu, "vulva ").
Alternative forms
[edit ]- childe (archaic )
- chile (eye dialect , Southern US )
- (plural): childrens (intentionally incorrect, nonstandard ); childs (nonstandard , rare )
Noun
[edit ]child (plural children or (dialectal or archaic ) childer )
- (broadly ) A person who has not yet reached adulthood, whether natural (puberty), cultural (initiation), or legal (majority).
- Synonym: kid
- Hyponyms: newborn , neonate , preteen , adolescent , tweenager , teenager , tween , teen , preadult
- Go easy on him: he is but a child.
- Regular chores can be appropriate for children, given age-appropriate limits on difficulty level and time on task.
- 2003 Powerpuff Girls: 'Twas the Fight Before Christmas (narration)
- And not just the children, teenagers too. Chuck wants a football, Kathleen a tattoo.
- 2013 June 7, Joseph Stiglitz, "Globalisation is about taxes too", in The Guardian Weekly [1] , volume 188, number 26, page 19:
- It is time the international community faced the reality: we have an unmanageable, unfair, distortionary global tax regime. [...] It is the starving of the public sector which has been pivotal in America no longer being the land of opportunity – with a child's life prospects more dependent on the income and education of its parents than in other advanced countries.
- 2025 April 27, Dakin Andone, "3 children who are US citizens — including one with cancer — deported with their mothers, lawyers and advocacy groups say", in CNN [2] :
- In one case, a mother was deported and took her 2-year-old child with her, while the other involves another mother deported and her 4- and 7-year-old children went with her, the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Immigration Project, among other organizations, said in a news release Friday.
- (pediatrics , sometimes, in a stricter sense) A youth aged 1 to 9 years, whereas neonates are aged 0 to 1 month, infants are aged 1 to 12 months, and adolescents are aged 10 to 20 years.
- (with possessive) One's direct descendant by birth, regardless of age; one's offspring; a son or daughter.
- My youngest child is forty-three this year.
- His adult children visit him yearly.
- (cartomancy ) The thirteenth Lenormand card.
- (figurative ) A figurative offspring, particularly:
- A person considered a product of a place or culture, a member of a tribe or culture, regardless of age.
- the children of Israel
- He is a child of his times.
- 1984, Mary Jane Matz, The Many Lives of Otto Kahn: A Biography, page 5:
- For more than forty years, he preached the creed of art and beauty. He was heir to the ancient wisdom of Israel, a child of Germany, a subject of Great Britain, later an American citizen, but in truth a citizen of the world.
- 2009, Edward John Moreton Dunsany, Tales of Wonder , page 64:
- Plash-Goo was of the children of the giants, whose sire was Uph. And the lineage of Uph had dwindled in bulk for the last five hundred years, till the giants were now no more than fifteen foot high; but Uph ate elephants[...]
- Anything derived from or caused by something.
- 1991, Salman Rushdie, Midnight's Children :
- Poverty, disease, and despair are the children of war.
- (computing ) A data item, process, or object which has a subservient or derivative role relative to another.
- The child node then stores the actual data of the parent node.
- 2011, John Mongan, Noah Kindler, Eric Giguère, Programming Interviews Exposed:
- The algorithm pops the stack to obtain a new current node when there are no more children (when it reaches a leaf).
- A person considered a product of a place or culture, a member of a tribe or culture, regardless of age.
- Alternative form of childe ("youth of noble birth").
- (mathematics , programming ) A subordinate node of a tree.
- (figurative ) An adult or adolescent with childish or stupid behaviors.
- My husband is such a child, going out with his sled everytime it snows.
- (obsolete , specifically) A female child, a girl.
- c. 1610–1611 (date written), William Shakespeare, "The Winters Tale", in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [...] (First Folio), London: [...] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene iii], page 288, column 2:
- A boy, or a Childe I wonder?
Synonyms
[edit ]- (young person): See Thesaurus:child , Thesaurus:boy , and Thesaurus:girl
- (offspring): See offspring and Thesaurus:son and Thesaurus:daughter , binary clone , progeny , hybrid
- (descendant): See descendant
- (product of a place or era): product , son (male), daughter (female)
Antonyms
[edit ]- (antonym(s) of "offspring"): father , mother , parent
- (antonym(s) of "person below the age of adulthood"): adult
- (antonym(s) of "data item, process or object in a subordinate role"): parent
Derived terms
[edit ]- abandoned child syndrome
- a burnt child dreads the fire
- adult child
- antichild
- barrel child
- battered child syndrome
- belchild
- biochild
- birthchild
- black child
- boomerang child
- boychild
- brainchild
- butterfly child
- call someone everything but a child of God
- Chester
- child abuse
- child abuser
- child actor
- childbearer
- child-bearing , childbearing
- child-bed , childbed
- child benefit
- child birth , child-birth , childbirth
- child bride , child-bride
- child care , childcare
- childcarer
- childcaring
- child carrier
- child car seat
- child category
- child-centered
- child-crowing
- child diddler
- child-directed speech
- child endangerment
- child-free
- child-fucker , childfucker
- child-great
- child groom
- childhood
- childie
- childification
- child-in-law
- childish
- childism
- childkind
- child labor , child labour
- child language
- childless
- child lifter
- child-like , childlike
- childline
- childling
- child lock
- childlore
- childlove
- childlover
- child-mind , childmind
- child minder , childminder
- child molestation
- child molester
- child-nature
- child neglect
- childness
- child node
- child of the kitchen
- child of the manse
- child porn
- child pornography
- child prodigy
- childproof
- child prostitution
- childraiser
- childraising
- childrearer
- child-rearing , childrearing
- child restraint
- childsafe
- child safety seat
- child seat
- child sex abuse
- child sex crime
- child sex tourism
- child sexual abuse
- child sexual abuse material
- childship
- child soldier
- childspeak
- child's play
- child support
- childtime
- child toucher , child-toucher
- child trafficking
- childwear
- choirchild
- chomo
- chrisom child
- cowchild
- dog-child
- dreamchild
- elf-child
- feral child
- flower child
- foster child
- get with child
- girlchild
- glass child
- god-child , godchild
- golden child
- grandchild , grand-child
- heavy with child
- home child
- honey child , honey chile
- Indigo child
- inner child
- innocent as the child unborn
- International Day of the Girl Child
- iPad child
- it is a wise child that knows his own father
- it takes a village to raise a child
- latch-key child , latchkey child
- lovechild , love-child , love child
- maid child , maid-child
- man child , man-child , manchild
- merchild
- middle child
- minor child
- moonchild
- name-child
- natural child
- nonchild
- once a man, twice a child
- once a woman, twice a child
- one-child policy
- only child
- password child
- poster child
- pretermitted child
- problem child
- saleschild
- schoolchild
- semichild
- single child
- snowchild
- snowflake child
- sooner child
- spare the rod and spoil the child
- spirit child
- street child
- subchild
- superchild
- sweet summer child
- thalidomide child
- the burnt child dreads the fire , the burnt child fears the fire
- twichild
- two child problem
- unborn child
- unchild
- Velcro child
- war child
- well-child clinic
- whole child
- wild child
- with child
- wolf child , wolf-child
- woman child , woman-child , womanchild
- wombchild , womb-child
- wonderchild
- wood-child
Related terms
[edit ]Translations
[edit ]| To be cleaned up | A user suggests that this English entry be cleaned up, giving the reason: "the translation tables don't exactly map onto the senses, particularly with regard to whether only descent or age is signified". |
|---|---|
| Please see the discussion on Requests for cleanup (+) or the talk page for more information and remove this template after the problem has been dealt with. |
- Abkhaz: аԥшқа (apŝka), асаби (asabi)
- Acehnese: aneuk
- Afar: awka
- Afrikaans: kind (af)
- Aghwan: 𐕘𐔰𐕙 (ġar)
- Albanian: fëmijë (sq) n, bemile f (old Tosk), kalaman m, pjellë (sq) , thmi (gheg)
- Altai:
- Amami Ōshima:
- Southern Amami Ōshima: warabɨ (warabɨ)
- Amharic: ልጅ (ləǧ), ብላቴና (bəlatena)
- Arabic: وَلَد (ar) m (walad), اِبْن (ar) m (ibn) (son), اِبْنَة f (ibna) (daughter)
- Aragonese: please add this translation if you can
- Aramaic:
- Classical Syriac: ܙܪܥܐ
- 'Are'are: wera
- Armenian: երեխա (hy) (erexa), զավակ (hy) (zavak)
- Arrernte:
- Eastern Arrernte: ampe
- Assamese: ল’ৰা-ছোৱালী (löra-süali), কণমানি (konmani), অকণি (okoni), শিশু (xixu), ছলি (soli)
- Asturian: fíu (ast) m, fía (ast) f
- Avar: лъимер (lsimer)
- Azerbaijani: uşaq (az) , bala (az) , çağa (az)
- Baluchi: چک (cukk)
- Bangi: mwana
- Banjarese: anak
- Bashkir: бала (bala)
- Basque: sein (eu) , ume
- Belarusian: дзіця́ n (dzicjá), дзіцё n (dzicjó), рабёнак m (rabjónak)
- Bengali: বাচ্চা (bn) (bacca), শিশু (bn) (śiśu), ওলদ (bn) (ōlod)
- Bhojpuri: बच्चा (baccā)
- Bikol:
- Bislama: pikinini
- Borôro: ore
- Bouyei: leg
- Breton: bugel (br) m
- Bulgarian: дете́ (bg) n (deté), че́до (bg) n (čédo), ро́жба (bg) f (róžba) (newborn)
- Burmese: ကလေး (my) (ka.le:)
- Buryat: хүүгэд (xüüged)
- Butuanon: bata
- Caijia: ŋa55
- Carpathian Rusyn: дїтя n (djitja), дїти́на f (djitýna)
- Catalan: nen (ca) , nena (ca) f, fill (ca) m (son), filla (ca) f (daughter), xiquet (ca) m, xiqueta (ca) f
- Cebuano: bata
- Chagatai: بلا (blā)
- Chakma: please add this translation if you can
- Cham:
- Eastern Cham: please add this translation if you can
- Western Cham: please add this translation if you can
- Chechen: бер (ber)
- Cherokee: ᎠᏳᎴ (ayule), ᎠᏲᏟ (ayotli)
- Chichewa: mwana class 1
- Chickasaw: chipota , inchipota
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 仔女 (zai2 neoi5-2), 細路 / 细路 (yue) (sai3 lou6), 細蚊仔 / 细蚊仔 (yue) (sai3 man1 zai2), 細路哥 / 细路哥 (sai3 lou6 go1), 細路仔 / 细路仔 (yue) (sai3 lou6 zai2)
- Dungan: хэзы (hezɨ), щёхэр (xioher), вава (vava), ва (va)
- Eastern Min: 伲囝 (niê-giāng)
- Gan: 細人子 / 细人子 (xi4 nyin zi)
- Hakka: 細人仔 / 细人仔 (se-ngìn-è)
- Hokkien: 囡仔 (zh-min-nan) (gín-á), 囡仔人 (zh-min-nan) (gín-á-lâng)
- Jin: 娃娃 (va1 va1-3)
- Mandarin: 小孩 (zh) (xiǎohái), 小孩子 (zh) (xiǎoháizi), 孩子 (zh) (háizi), 小孩兒 / 小孩儿 (zh) (xiǎoháir), 孺子 (zh) (rúzǐ) (literary)
- Northern Min: 囝仔 (gṳ̌ing-ciě), 囝仔人 (gṳ̌ing-ciě-nêng)
- Teochew: 孥囝 (nou5 gian2)
- Wu: 小囡
- Xiang: 細伢子 / 细伢子 (si4 nga2 zr), 細人子 / 细人子 (si4 ren2 zr), 伢妹子 (nga2 mei5 zr)
- Chuvash: ача (ač̬a)
- Circassian:
- Cornish: flogh
- Crimean Tatar: bala , evlât
- Czech: dítě (cs) n
- Danish: barn (da) n, børn (da) pl
- Dongxiang: kewosi
- Dutch: kind (nl) n
- Dzongkha: please add this translation if you can
- Ede:
- Ifè: ɔma
- Egyptian: X(ẖrd m),
r
d Xrdms s Xrd(ms m)- Elfdalian: kripp m
- Emilian: please add this translation if you can
- Erzya: эйде (ejde)
- Eshtehardi: لَزَک (lazak)
- Esperanto: (♂♀) infano (eo) , (♂) virinfano , (♀) infanino
- Estonian: laps (et)
- Evenki: куңакан
- Ewe: vi
- Extremaduran: please add this translation if you can
- Faroese: barn (fo) n
- Finnish: lapsi (fi) , kakara (fi) (derogatory, colloquial), mukula (fi) (colloquial), muksu (fi) (colloquial), nappula (fi) (colloquial), skidi (fi) (slang), pentu (fi) (derogatory, colloquial), tytär (fi) (formal, daughter), tyttö (fi) (daughter), poika (fi) (son), nahkapokaali (humorous, slang), ipana (fi) , nulikka (fi) (derogatory), natiainen (fi) , vaahtosammutin (fi) , penikka (fi) , penska (fi) , napero (fi) , kersa (fi) , räkänokka (fi) (derogatory), riiviö (fi) (derogatory), piltti (fi) , taapero (fi) , junnu (fi) , toukka (fi) , kakru (fi) , pirpana (fi) , tenava (fi) , vekara (fi)
- French: enfant (fr) m or f
- Frisian:
- Friulian: please add this translation if you can
- Galician: nena (gl) f, neno (gl) m
- Ge'ez: ወልድ (wäld)
- Georgian: ბავშვი (bavšvi), შვილი (švili), ძე m (ʒe), ასული f (asuli)
- German: Kind (de) n
- Gothic: 𐍆𐍂𐌰𐍃𐍄𐍃 m (frasts), 𐌱𐌰𐍂𐌽 n (barn)
- Greek: παιδί (el) n (paidí), τέκνο (el) n (tékno) (formal)
- Greenlandic: meeraq
- Guarani:
- Guinea-Bissau Creole: fidju
- Gujarati: બાળક (gu) (bāḷka)
- Haitian Creole: timoun
- Hausa: ya’ya
- Hawaiian: keiki
- Hebrew: יֶלֶד (he) m (yéled) (male or in general), יַלְדָּה f (yaldá) (female child), בֵּן (he) m (ben) (son), בַּת (he) f (bat) (daughter)
- Higaonon: bata
- Hiligaynon: bata
- Hindi: बच्चा (hi) m (baccā), बेटा (hi) m (beṭā) (son), बेटी (hi) f (beṭī) (daughter), शिशु (hi) m (śiśu), लड़का (hi) m (laṛkā), लड़की (hi) f (laṛkī), छोरा (hi) m (chorā), छोरी (hi) f (chorī), बच्ची (hi) f (baccī), बालक (hi) m (bālak), बालिका (hi) f (bālikā), कन्या (hi) f (kanyā)
- Hmong:
- Chuanqiandian Cluster Miao: lx (Dananshan Miao)
- Hungarian: gyerek (hu) , gyermek (hu) (legal, medical or literary), kölyök (hu)
- Iban: anak
- Icelandic: barn (is) n, krakki (is) m
- Ido: (♂♀) infanto (io) , (♂) infantulo (io) , (♀) infantino (io) , (♂♀) puero (io) , (♂) puerulo (io) , (♀) puerino (io) , (♂♀) filio (io) , (♂) filiulo (io) , (♀) filiino (io)
- Igbo: nyaka , nwata
- Ilocano: anak
- Indonesian: anak (id) , kanak (id)
- Ingrian: lapsi
- Ingush: бер (ber)
- Interlingua: filia (ia) f
- Iranun: wata'
- Irish: páiste (ga) m, clann (ga) f (collective)
- Isoko: ọmọ
- Italian: bambino (it) m, bambina (it) f, figlio (it) m, figlia (it) f
- Jamaican Creole: pickney
- Japanese: 子供 (ja) (こども, kodomo), 子 (ja) (こ, ko)
- Javanese: anak (jv) , putra (jv) , bocah (jv) , laré
- Jeju: 아이 (ai), 아의 (aui) (now proscribed)
- Judeo-Tat: гIэиль
- Kabuverdianu: fidju
- Kabyle: agrud m
- Kaingang: kósin
- Kaitag: дяргья́ (dərhə́), нана́ (naná)
- Kalenjin: lakwet
- Kannada: ಹಸುಳೆ (kn) (hasuḷe), ಮಗು (kn) (magu)
- Karachay-Balkar: бала (bala)
- Karakalpak: bala
- Kashmiri: شُر (śur), بَچہٕ (bacụ)
- Kashubian: òtrok m
- Kazakh: бала (kk) (bala)
- Khanty:
- Eastern Khanty: њэврэм (njewrem)
- Khmer: កូន (km) (koun)
- Khoekhoe: (please verify) ǀgôa-i
- Kikuyu: mwana class 1
- Kongo: mwana class 1
- Korean: 어린이 (ko) (eorini), 아이 (ko) (ai), 애 (ko) (ae)
- Middle Korean: 아ᄒᆡ〮 (àhóy)
- Krio: pikin
- Kumyk: яш (yaş)
- Kunda: mwana class 1
- Kurdish:
- Kyrgyz: бала (ky) (bala), наристе (ky) (nariste)
- Laboya: ana
- Ladino: kreatura f, kriatura f
- Lao: ເດັກນ້ອຍ (lo) (dek nǭi), ລູກ (lūk), ເດັກ (dek)
- Latgalian: bārns m
- Latin: filius (la) m, filia (la) f
- Latvian: bērns (lv) m
- Lezgi: аял (aäl)
- Ligurian: please add this translation if you can
- Lingala: mwǎna class 1
- Lithuanian: vaikas (lt) m
- Livonian: läpš
- Lombard: please add this translation if you can
- Louisiana Creole: piti
- Low German: Kind (nds) n
- Lü: ᦟᦴᧅ (luuk)
- Luba-Kasai: mwana
- Luba-Katanga: mwana
- Luganda: omwana class 1
- Luhya: omwana class 1
- Luo: nyithindo
- Lushootseed: bədaʔ
- Lutuv: haatiy
- Luxembourgish: Kand n
- Macedonian: дете (mk) n (dete), чедо n (čedo)
- Maguindanao: wata
- Makasae: mata
- Malay: budak (ms) , anak (ms)
- Malayalam: കുട്ടി (ml) (kuṭṭi)
- Maltese: tfal m, ibna , tifel (mt) m
- Māori: pangore , tamaiti (mi)
- Maranao: wata' , bata'
- Marathi: मूल n (mūl)
- Mari: ньога (ńoga)
- Maricopa: humar
- Mazanderani: وچه (vače)
- Melanau:
- Central Melanau: aneak
- Middle English: child , barn
- Mirandese: criança f
- Mizo: fa
- Moksha: идь (iď)
- Mon: ကွေန် (kon)
- Mongolian:
- Mori Bawah: ana
- Mpoto: mwana class 1
- Mwani: mwana class 1
- Mwera: mwana class 1
- Naga:
- Khiamniungan Naga: tshōu
- Nanai: пиктэ (pikte)
- Navajo: awééʼ , áłchíní pl
- Ndendeule: mwana class 1
- Nepali: बच्चा (baccā)
- Ngarrindjeri: porli
- Nigerian Pidgin: pikin
- Nivkh: оғла (oγla)
- Norman: êfant m or f, avé m, mousse m or f
- Norwegian:
- Nuer: gat
- Nupe: egi
- Nyakyusa: umwana class 1
- Nyole (Uganda): omwana class 1
- Nyunga: koorlingah
- Nyungwe: mwana class 1
- Odia: ପିଲା (or) (pilā), ଶିଶୁ (or) (śiśu)
- Ohlone:
- Northern Ohlone: šiiniinikma c pl
- Okinawan: 子 (っくゎ, kkwa), わらび
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Old East Slavic: дѣтя n (dětja), чадо n (čado)
- Old English: ċild (ang) n, bearn (ang) n, umbor n
- Old Norse: barn n
- Old Prussian: malnīks
- O'odham: ali
- Ossetian: саби (sabi)
- Pali: dārako m
- Devanagari: दारको m (dārako)
- Pannonian Rusyn: дзецко n (dzecko)
- Papiamentu: mucha
- Pashto: ماشوم (ps) m (māšum), (please verify) کوچنۍ (kučnəy)
- Pennsylvania German: Kind n
- Persian:
- Piedmontese: please add this translation if you can
- Pijin: pikinini
- Pirahã: tiobáhai
- Pitjantjatjara: tjitji
- Plautdietsch: Kjint (nds) n
- Polabian: våtrük m
- Polish: dziecko (pl) n, dziecię (pl) n (dated)
- Portuguese: filho (pt) m, filha (pt) f, criança (pt) f
- Punjabi:
- Gurmukhi: ਬੱਚਾ m or f (baccā)
- Quechua: wamra (qu)
- Rakhine: please add this translation if you can
- Rohingya: please add this translation if you can
- Romagnol: please add this translation if you can
- Romanian: fiu (ro) m, fiică (ro) f, copil (ro) m, copilă (ro) f,
- Romansh: uffant m, affon m, unfànt m, unfant m, iffaunt m
- Russian: ребёнок (ru) m (rebjónok), дитя́ (ru) n (ditjá), ча́до (ru) n (čádo) (archaic, humorous)
- Saek: แด๊ก
- Saho: awka
- Sami:
- Samogitian: vāks m
- Sanskrit: शिशु (sa) m (śiśu), बालक (sa) m (bālaka), जात (sa) m or n (jāta)
- Santali: ᱜᱳᱱ (sat) (gon)
- Saraiki: ٻال (skr) (ḇāl)
- Savosavo: gnuba
- Scots: bairn
- Scottish Gaelic: pàisde m, leanabh m
- Sena: mwana class 1
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Shan: လုၵ်ႈ (shn) (lūk)
- Sikkimese: please add this translation if you can
- Silesian: dziycio
- Sindhi: ٻارُ (sd) (ḇāru)
- Sinhalese: ළමයා (si) (ḷamayā)
- Slovak: dieťa (sk) n
- Slovene: otrok (sl) m, dete (sl) n
- Somali: ilmo (so) , caruur , canug
- Sorbian:
- Sotho: ngwana (st)
- Spanish: hijo (es) m, hija (es) f, niño (es) m, niña (es) f
- Sundanese: murangkalih
- Swahili: mtoto (sw) class 1, mwana (sw) class 1
- Swedish: barn (sv) n
- Sylheti: ꠛꠣꠁꠌ꠆ꠌꠣ (baicca), ꠢꠥꠞꠥꠔꠣ (huruta)
- Tabaru: ngowaka
- Tagalog: anak (tl)
- Tai Dam: ꪩꪴꪀ
- Tai Nüa: ᥘᥧᥐ (luk)
- Tajik: кӯдак (tg) (küdak), бача (tg) (bača)
- Talysh: باله (bâla) (Anbarani), خردن (xərdan) (Asalemi)
- Tamil: குழந்தை (ta) (kuḻantai), மக (ta) (maka)
- Taos: ȕʼúna
- Tatar: бала (tt) (bala)
- Tausug: anak , bata
- Telugu: పాప (te) (pāpa)
- Ternate: ngofa
- Tetela: ona
- Tetum: labarik
- Tewa: ay
- Thai: ลูก (th) (lûuk), เด็ก (th) (dèk), ศิศุ (sì-sù)
- Tibetan: ཕྲུ་གུ (phru gu), ཨ་བ (a ba)
- Tidore: ngofa
- Tigrinya: ሕጻን (ḥəṣan), ቆልዓ (ḳolʿa)
- Tok Pisin: pikinini
- Tooro: omwana class 1
- Tumbuka: mwana class 1
- Turkish: çocuk (tr) , evlat (tr) (one's own child)
- Turkmen: çaga
- Tuvan: уруг (urug)
- Udmurt: нылпи (nylpi)
- Ugaritic: 𐎊𐎍𐎄 (yld)
- Ukrainian: дити́на (uk) f (dytýna), дитя́ n (dytjá), дитя́тко n (dytjátko)
- Urdu: بَچَّہ m (bacca), بیٹا (ur) m (beṭā) (son), بیٹی f (beṭī) (daughter)
- Uyghur: بالا (ug) (bala)
- Uzbek: bola (uz)
- Veps: lapsʹ
- Vietnamese: đứa bé (vi) , đứa trẻ , con (vi) (one's child)
- Volapük: cil (vo) (male or female), hicil (vo) (male), jicil (vo) (female), son (vo) , daut (vo) , jison (daughter, obsolete), cilef (collective)
- Votic: lahsi
- Walloon: efant (wa) m
- Welsh: plentyn (cy) m
- Woiwurrung: bubup
- Wolof: xale (wo) , gune
- Wutunhua: galamala
- Xârâcùù: xûûchî
- Xhosa: umntwana
- Yakut: оҕо (oğo)
- Yao (Africa): mwanace class 1
- Yiddish: קינד n (kind)
- Yoruba: èwe , ọmọ , ọmọdé
- Yucatec Maya: paal , aal
- Zande: gude
- Zazaki: qeç (diq) , tut , lorek , doman (diq)
- Zealandic: kind n
- Zhuang: lwg , lwgnyez
- Zulu: umntwana (zu) class 1/2, ingane (zu) class 9/10
- ǃXóõ: ʘqa̰a
a minor- Abkhaz: ахәыҷы (axwəčʼə), аҷааҷи (ačʼaačʼi) (childish, baby-talk)
- Afrikaans: kind (af)
- Albanian: fëmijë (sq) n
- Ao:
- Chungli Ao: tanur
- Arabic: طِفْل (ar) m (ṭifl), طِفْلَة f (ṭifla)
- 'Are'are: wera
- Armenian: երեխա (hy) (erexa), մանուկ (hy) (manuk)
- Asturian: neñu (ast) m, ñeñu m
- Azerbaijani: uşaq (az) , bala (az)
- Baluchi: چک (cukk)
- Bashkir: бала (bala)
- Breton: minor m, minored pl, bugel (br) m
- Bulgarian: дете́ (bg) n (deté)
- Burmese: ကလေး (my) (ka.le:)
- Catalan: nen (ca)
- Chinese:
- Crimean Tatar: bala
- Czech: dítě (cs) n
- Danish: barn (da) n, børn (da) pl
- Dongxiang: kewosi
- Dutch: kind (nl) n
- Efate:
- South Efate: tesa
- Emilian: cínno m, cínna f
- Esperanto: infano (eo) (male or female), virinfano (male), infanino (female)
- Estonian: laps (et)
- Ewe: ɖevi
- Fijian: gone (fj)
- Finnish: lapsi (fi) , alaikäinen (fi)
- French: enfant (fr) m
- Frisian:
- Georgian: ბავშვი (bavšvi)
- German: Kind (de) n
- Greek: παιδί (el) n (paidí), ανήλικος (el) m (anílikos)
- Gujarati: બાળક (gu) (bāḷka)
- Hawaiian: keiki
- Hebrew: יֶלֶד (he) m (yéled), יַלְדָּה f (yaldá)
- Hindi: बच्चा (hi) m (baccā), बच्ची (hi) f (baccī), शिशु (hi) m (śiśu), बालक (hi) m (bālak), बालिका (hi) f (bālikā)
- Hungarian: gyerek (hu) , gyermek (hu)
- Icelandic: barn (is)
- Ido: puero (io) , infanto (io)
- Interlingua: infante (ia)
- Irish: páiste (ga) m
- Italian: bambino (it) m, bambina (it) f
- Japanese: 子供 (ja) (こども, kodomo), 子 (ja) (こ, ko), 未成年 (ja) (みせいねん, miseinen)
- Korean: 어린이 (ko) (eorini)
- Kurdish:
- Latgalian: bārns m
- Latin: praetextatus m, impubes c
- Latvian: bērns (lv) m
- Lezgi: аял (aäl)
- Lithuanian: vaikas (lt) m
- Livonian: läpš
- Macedonian: дете (mk) n (dete)
- Malagasy: zaza (mg)
- Maltese: tifla
- Middle English: child , barn , gerle
- Mizo: naupang
- Mongolian: хөвүүн (mn) (xövüün)
- Mwani: kisimana
- Ngarrindjeri: porli
- Norman: êfant m or f, avé m, mousse m or f
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: barn (no) n mindreårig (no) m
- Nupe: dzánkàn
- Old English: ċild (ang)
- Persian:
- Polish: dziecko (pl) n
- Portuguese: criança (pt) f, menino (pt) m, menina (pt) f, miúdo (pt) m (Portugal)
- Potawatomi: penoje
- Punjabi:
- Gurmukhi: ਬੱਚਾ m or f (baccā)
- Romanian: copil (ro) m, copilă (ro) f
- Romansh: uffant m, affon m, unfànt m, unfant m, iffaunt m
- Russian: ребёнок (ru) m (rebjónok), дитя́ (ru) n (ditjá)
- Samogitian: vāks m
- Sanskrit: शिशु (sa) (śíśu)
- Scots: bairn
- Scottish Gaelic: pàisde m, leanabh m
- Slovene: otrok (sl) m
- Sorbian:
- Spanish: niño (es) m, niña (es) f, ñaño (es) m, escuintle (es) m, chiwchi (es) m or f (Peru)
- Swahili: mtoto (sw)
- Swedish: barn (sv)
- Tagalog: bata (tl)
- Tok Pisin: pikinini
- Turkish: çocuk (tr)
- Ukrainian: дити́на (uk) f (dytýna), дитя́ n (dytjá)
- Urdu: بَچَّہ m (bacca)
- Vietnamese: đứa bé (vi) , đứa trẻ
- Welsh: plentyn dan oed
- Yiddish: קינד (kind)
- Yoruba: ọmọdé
- Yucatec Maya: paal
- Zazaki: qeç (diq) , doman (diq)
- Zhuang: lwgnyez
- Zulu: umntwana (zu) class 1/2, ingane (zu) class 9/10
(figuratively) things or abstractions derived from or caused by somethingmember of a tribe, a people or a race of beings(computing) object which has a subservient or derivative role relative to another object- Chinese:
- Czech: dcera (cs) f
- Dutch: kind (nl) n
- Finnish: lapsiobjekti
- Georgian: შვილობილი (švilobili)
- Greek: απότοκος (el) m (apótokos)
- Icelandic: barn (is)
- Japanese: 子 (ja) (こ, ko)
- Norwegian:
- Portuguese: filho (pt) m
- Russian: доче́рний (ru) (dočérnij)
- Swahili: mwana (sw)
- Swedish: barn (sv)
- Vietnamese: con (vi) (only attributively)
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked- Breton: (please verify) krouadur (br) m, (please verify) -ien (br) (young child)
- Guarani:
- Indonesian: (please verify) anak (id) , (please verify) bocah (id)
- Interlingua: (please verify) infante (ia)
- Korean: (please verify) 어린이 (ko) (eorini)
- Kurdish:
- Maltese: (please verify) iben , (please verify) tifel (mt)
- Persian: (please verify) بَچِّه (fa) (bačče)
See also
[edit ]Etymology 2
[edit ]From Middle English childen , from the noun child .
Verb
[edit ]child (third-person singular simple present childs , present participle childing , simple past and past participle childed )
- (archaic , ambitransitive ) To give birth; to beget or procreate.
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, "Book VI, Canto XII", in The Faerie Queene. [...] , part II (books IV–VI), London: [...] [Richard Field] for William Ponsonby, →OCLC, stanza 17, page 512:
- My liefe (sayd she) ye know, that long ygo,
Whilest ye in durance dwelt, ye to me gaue
A little mayde, the which ye chylded tho ;
The same againe if now ye list to haue,
The same is yonder Lady, whom high God did saue.
- 1600, [Torquato Tasso], "The Eighteenth Booke of Godfrey of Bulloigne", in Edward Fairefax [i.e., Edward Fairfax], transl., Godfrey of Bulloigne, or The Recouerie of Ierusalem. [...] , London: [...] Ar[nold] Hatfield, for I[saac] Iaggard and M[atthew] Lownes, →OCLC, stanza 26, page 320:
- And from his fertill hollow wombe forth ran,
(Clad in rare weedes and strange habiliment)
A Nymph, for age able to goe to man,
An hundreth plants beside (euen in his sight)
Childed an hundreth Nymphes, so great, so dight:[...]
- c. 1603–1606 (date written), [William Shakespeare], [...] His True Chronicle Historie of the Life and Death of King Lear and His Three Daughters. [...] (First Quarto), London: [...] Nathaniel Butter, [...], published 1608, →OCLC, [Act III, scene v]:
- [...]But then the mind much sufferance doth or'e scip,
When griefe hath mates,and bearing fellowship :
How light and portable my paine seemes now,
When that which makes me bend, makes the King bow,
He childed as I fathered,Tom away,
Marke the high noyses and thy selfe bewray,[...]
Translations
[edit ]to give birth — see give birthFurther reading
[edit ]- Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary (accessed November 2007).
- American Heritage Dictionary , Fourth Edition, Houghton Mifflin Company (2003).
Middle English
[edit ]Alternative forms
[edit ]Etymology
[edit ]Inherited from Old English ċild , from Proto-Germanic *kelþaz .
Pronunciation
[edit ]Noun
[edit ]child (plural children or childre or (rare) childres or (early) child)
- A child , (person who has not reached adulthood ):
- A baby, infant, toddler; a person in infancy.
- (Christianity ) The Christ child; Jesus as a child .
- A young male, especially a hireling or squire.
- The young of animals or plants.
- An offspring, one of one's progeny.
- A childish or stupid individual.
- (figurative ) A follower of a religion (usually with the religion in the genitive preposing it)
- (rare ) A result or product.
Declension
[edit ]Declension of child singular plural (nominative/accusative) child childre, children genitive childes childres, childrene dative childe 1 — 1Optional; mostly fossilised after Early Middle English.
Related terms
[edit ]Descendants
[edit ]References
[edit ]- "chīld, n.", in MED Online , Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 23 April 2018.
- English 1-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/aɪld
- Rhymes:English/aɪld/1 syllable
- English terms with homophones
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English nouns with irregular plurals
- English terms with usage examples
- English terms with quotations
- en:Cartomancy
- en:Computing
- en:Mathematics
- en:Programming
- English terms with obsolete senses
- English verbs
- English terms with archaic senses
- English transitive verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- en:Age
- en:Children
- en:Family members
- en:People
- Middle English terms inherited from Old English
- Middle English terms derived from Old English
- Middle English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Middle English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Middle English terms with IPA pronunciation
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English nouns
- enm:Christianity
- Middle English terms with rare senses
- enm:Babies
- enm:Children
- enm:Family
- enm:Nobility
- enm:People
- Middle English z-stem nouns