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Child Definition

Contents

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English, from Old English ċild (“child, infant, youth of gentle birth”), from Proto-Germanic *kildiz (“child in the womb, fruit of the womb, child”), from Proto-Indo-European *g(')elt- (“womb”). Cognate with Danish kuld (“brood, litter”), Swedish kull (“brood, litter”), Icelandic kelta, kjalta (“lap”), Gothic 𐌺𐌹𐌻𐌸𐌴𐌹 (kilþei, “womb”), Sanskrit (jarta), (jártu, “vulva”).

Pronunciation

Noun

child (children or (dialectal) childer or (nonstandard) childs or (humorous or non-standard) childrens)

  1. A daughter or son.
    Her child is in 1st grade.
    My youngest child is forty-three.
  2. A person who is below the age of adulthood; a minor (person who is below the legal age of responsibility or accountability).
    • 1989, United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, PART I, Article 1
      For the purposes of the present Convention, a child means every human being below the age of eighteen years unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier.
  3. (computing) A data item, process or object which has a subservient or derivative role relative to another data item, process or object.
    The child node then stores the actual data of the parent node.

Synonyms

Antonyms

References

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Related terms

Related terms

See also

 

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