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Example sentences for "young children"

  • But the evidence of all such cases of the voluntary use of articulate speech by young children is qualified by the fact that it has been inherited from very many generations, if not quite so long as the faculty of gesture.

  • With regard to the sounds uttered by deaf-mutes, the same explanation of heredity may be made as above, regarding the words invented by young children.

  • Young children, in riding on horseback, are rather apt to acquire, rapidly, the habit of domineering over animals.

  • But if adults who perspire freely do not require much drink, children certainly do not; and above all, young children.

  • The bones of the head, in young children, are not yet firmly knit together, and these concussions may injure the tender brain.

  • The whole manipulation can be performed with great delicacy, and is entirely guided by the eye, so that there is little fear of injury even in young children.

  • In young children it is frequently advisable to leave the posterior wound open owing to the difficulty of packing the wound cavity through the small external meatus.

  • The backward direction of the duct is much more marked in young children than in adults.

  • At the same time it must be remembered that in infants and in young children it is not uncommon for retention of pus within the middle ear to produce a clinical picture closely simulating an intracranial suppurative lesion.

  • Another frequent cause of fire is the employment of young children in lighting fires, from their propensity to play with flame.

  • A neglect of this point often produces very serious consequences, especially in young children.

  • The close stoves, crowded condition, and poisonous air, of most schoolrooms, act as constant drains on the health and strength of young children.

  • There are none, so ready as young children to assume airs of equality; and, if they are allowed to treat one class of superiors in age and character disrespectfully, they will soon use the privilege universally.

  • Treatment of grown Brothers and Sisters by Young Children.

  • It attacks all ages, but it is particularly fatal to young children.

  • The chances of infection are greatest in young children.

  • Very many of the earaches of young children, from two to ten years of age, are due to this disease.

  • But that is a grown-up attitude, seldom taken by {151} young children.

  • Possibly the delight in being out of doors which shows itself in young children, and is not lost in adults, represents a sort of air-hunting instinct, parallel to food-hunting.

  • Young children, however, get the opposite illusion, assimilating the weight to the visual appearance; but older persons switch over to the contrast effect, and perceive in opposition to the visual appearance.

  • Young children, whilst cutting their first set of teeth, often suffer severe constitutional disturbance.

  • If properly made, it is the most nutritious, at the same time the most delicate food that can be given to young children.

  • Of Gripes and Pains in the, Bellies of Young Children.

  • This contention may be absolutely rejected, without thereby, in any degree, denying the important place which fairy-tales hold in the imagination of young children.

  • The instinctive faith of young children in their mother's truthfulness is so strong that no absurdity seems gross enough to overcome it.

  • When one comes to the loss of young children--a sad perplexity--let it not be forgotten that they were given.

  • Erichsen favors the Jewish operation in young children, as being the easiest and safest of performance.

  • Bernheim warns us against using antiseptics on infants or young children, in connection with the after-dressing of circumcision.

  • Now it is precisely these duties that must be impressed on young children, and hence the biblical stories present us with the very material we require.

  • An excellent story to tell, especially to young children, is that of Dama.

  • In the case of young children, the force of the physical appetite may also be weakened by appealing to their affection.

  • In young children, however, neither of these is practicable, and I prefer to place the instrument in the groin, and crossing one leg over the other, to maintain the thermometer there for the requisite five minutes.

  • Attacks of earache are most frequent before the first set of teeth have been cut, and are by no means rare in young children, who are perfectly unable to point out the seat of their sufferings.

  • This circumstance attaches special importance to sore-throat in young children, since it will usually be found to betoken the approach of scarlet fever, or of diphtheria, rather than the existence of simple inflammation, or quinsey.

  • In by far the greater number of instances, the wasting of young children is due to their being fed upon food which they cannot digest, or which when digested fails to yield them proper nourishment.

  • We see them in young children, in animals, and now and then, but rarely, in some adult human being, who has preserved intact the religion of the body through all opposing influences.

  • Leaving the boarding-school, she became the helper of an invalid wife and mother in the early nursing and rearing of a family of young children,--an office which leaves no privacy and no leisure.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "young children" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    certain respects; departure from; young animal; young animals; young artists; young bird; young brother; young creature; young dream; young fellows; young folks; young gentleman; young horse; young lawyer; young lion; young maiden; young male; young miss; young nobleman; young prince; young reader; young shoots; young sirs; young specimens; young state; younger brothers