例句
同义词
反义词
  • n.
    parent的反义词之:父亲;母亲
    child
  • parent的反义词之:其他释义
    child
英语四级真题
  • Their parents' bad experience still haunts them.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Apartments will retain their appeal for a while for Millennials, haunted by what happened to home-owning parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • After that, survey respondents disagree over whether this generation will follow in their parents' footsteps, moving to the suburbs to raise families, or will choose to remain in the city center.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Whenever she called her parents or other relatives, she always had to think about the time difference so that she wouldn’t wake someone up or call when she knew they were at church.
    出自-2017年6月听力原文
  • When your elderly relative needs to enter some sort of long-term care facility—a moment few parents or children approach without fear—what you would like is to have everything made clear.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • We all have our own ideas about what would bring our parents happiness.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Though it helps for children to investigate care facilities, involving their parents in the decision-making process may prove very important.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Parents' involvement.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Parents regard it as the first phase of children's development.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Many people feel guilty when they cannot find a place other than a nursing home for their parents.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Parents and teachers will tell you not to worry when applying for a place at a university.
    出自-2016年6月听力原文
  • In addition, parents and teachers can help children by providing explicit instruction regarding the mind as a learning machine.
    出自-2016年12月阅读原文
  • Parents and students who have invested heavily in higher education worry about graduates' job prospects as technological advances and changes in domestic and global markets transform professions in ways that reduce wages and cut jobs.
    出自-2014年6月阅读原文
  • what suggestion does the author offer to parents?
    出自-2013年12月阅读原文
  • He says men are more likely to see money as a way of buying status and of showing their parents that they've achieved something.
    出自-2011年12月阅读原文
  • Participation in this project helped the girls developed a new attitude towards their parents of their own homes; they've learned how to work with tools, and improve their work habits.
    出自-2013年6月听力原文
  • There are now growing numbers of people who live alone, single parents and children, and double-income families
    出自-2012年12月听力原文
  • Instead, the company said Tuesday, its employees will ask parents whether they prefer such options as milk or sliced apples before assembling the meals
    出自-2012年12月听力原文
  • I imagine that what my parents were trying to teach me was to take responsibilities for my actions and my choices.
    出自-2011年12月听力原文
  • One consideration is to ask parents what they want before they become sick or dependent.
    出自-2011年6月听力原文
  • Why are adult children more likely to use community services to help care for elderly parents
    出自-2011年6月听力原文
  • Growing up in San Francisco, he learnt Spanish from his immigrant parents.
    出自-2010年12月听力原文
  • Perhaps parents in Britain are too generous.
    出自-2010年6月听力原文
  • In 2014, 28% of young men were living with a spouse or partner in their own home, while 35% were living in the home of their parent s.
    2019年6月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B
  • Some 14% of young adults lived alone, were a single parent or lived with one or more roommates.
    2019年6月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B
英语六级真题
  • Working-class parents, meanwhile, believe their children will naturally thrive, and give them far greater independence and time for free play.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Working-class parents teach their children to be obedient and show respect to adults.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Will parents be damaging children if they have one fewer organized activity? No, I really doubt it.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • White parents are more likely than others to read to their children daily, as are married parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • While rich parents are more concerned with their children's psychological well-being, poor parents are more worried about their children's safety.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • While bullying is parents' greatest concern over all, nearly half of low-income parents worry their child will get shot, compared with one-fifth of high-income parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Wealthy parents are concerned about their children's mental health and busy schedules.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • We want to reach parents who are not plugged into the system, said Zaharopol.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • They are more likely to grow up in neighborhoods that their parents say aren't great for raising children, and their parents worry about them getting shot, beaten up or in trouble with the law.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • There is no best parenting style or philosophy, researchers say, and across income groups, 92% of parents say they are doing a good job at raising their children.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • There are usually two parents, who spend a lot of time reading to children and worrying about their anxiety levels and hectic schedules.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • The football team, the basketball team—that's our competition for resources, student time, attention, school dollars, parent efforts, school enthusiasm.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • The cycle continues: Poorer parents have less time and fewer resources to invest in their children, which can leave children less prepared for school and work, which leads to lower earnings.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Social scientists say the differences arise in part because low-income parents have less money to spend on music class or preschool, and less flexible schedules to take children to museums or attend school events.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Physical punishment is used much less by well-educated parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Parents who are white, wealthy or college-educated say too much involvement can be bad.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Parents of advanced-math students and MathCounts coaches say the children are on the website constantly.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Nonetheless, 20% of well-off parents say their children's schedules are too hectic, compared with 8% of poorer parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Nearly half of high-earning, college-graduate parents enrolled their children in arts classes before they were 5, compared with one-fifth of low-income, lesseducated parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Most affluent parents enroll their children in preschool or day care, while low-income parents are more likely to depend on family members.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Most American parents say they are not concerned about their children's grades as long as they work hard.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • More than a quarter of children live in single-parent households—a historic high, according to Pew—and these children are three times as likely to live in poverty as those who live with married parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Middle-class and higher-income parents see their children as projects in need of careful cultivation, says Annette Lareau, whose groundbreaking research on the topic was published in her book Unequal Childhoods: Class, Race and Family Life.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Less-educated parents, and poorer and black and Latino parents are more likely to believe that there is no such thing as too much involvement in a child's education.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Interestingly, parents' attitudes toward education do not seem to reflect their own educational background as much as a belief in the importance of education for upward mobility.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • In the Pew survey, middle-class families earning between $30,000 and $75,000 a year fell right between working-class and high-earning parents on issues like the quality of their neighborhood for raising children, participation in extracurricular activities and involvement in their children's education.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Higher-income children are more likely to declare boredom and expect their parents to solve their problems.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • High-earning parents are much more likely to say they live in a good neighborhood for raising children.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Extracurricular activities reflect the differences in child rearing in the Pew survey, which was of a nationally representative sample of 1,807 parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Do all parents want the most success for their children? Absolutely, she said.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • But 50% of poor parents say it is extremely important to them that their children earn a college degree, compared with 39% of wealthier parents.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • American parents, whether rich or poor, have similar expectations of their children despite different ways of parenting.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • American parents want similar things for their children, the Pew report and past research have found: for them to be healthy and happy, honest and ethical, caring and compassionate.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • 71% of parents with a college degree say they do it every day, compared with 33% of those with a high school diploma or less.
    出自-2017年6月阅读原文
  • Yet even then reports of widespread youth rebellion were overdone: Most kids in the ‘60s and ‘70s shared their parents' basic values.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Within just the past five years, I have noticed parents returning to a belief that teenagers need the guidance of elders rather than the liberal, anything goes mode of child-rearing that became popular in the second half of the 20th century.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Today's teenagers admire their parents and welcome parental guidance about important matters such as career choice—though certainly not Mom and Dad's advice on matters of personal taste, such as music or fashion.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • They think of their parents with affection and respect.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Teenagers of today often turn to their parents for advice on such important matters as career choice.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Some young people like to keep something to themselves and don't want their parents to know about it.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Results of USA WEEKEND's Teens & Parents survey reveal a generation of young people who get along well with their parents and approve of the way they're being raised.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Parents are concerned that their children may get involved in criminal offences once they reach their teens.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • No wonder parents worry their own kids might spin out of control once they hit the turbulent waters of adolescence.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Most teens say they enjoy the company of both parents and friends.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their family is the No.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Many even think their parents are cool! Although more than a third have an object in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, rarely is it anything more alarming than a diary or offcolor ( ' , 低俗的) book or CD.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than in the recent past.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • 1 priority in their parents' lives.
    出自-2016年6月阅读原文
  • Parents, teachers, even the kids themselves, scored the youngsters on measures like acting before thinking and persistence in reaching goals.
    出自-2016年6月听力原文
  • Working parents say they feel stressed, tired, rushed and short on quality time with their children, friends and partners.
    出自-2016年12月阅读原文
  • While most parents, teachers and clinicians would react to an adolescent using drugs or getting drunk, they may easily overlook teenagers who are engaging in inconspicuous behaviors.
    出自-2016年12月阅读原文
  • There's a lot for students to complain about: the repayment threshold for paying back loans will be frozen for five years, meaning that lower-paid graduates have to start repaying their loans; and maintenance grants have been replaced by loans, meaning that students from poorer backgrounds face higher debt than those with wealthier parents.
    出自-2016年12月阅读原文
  • Their risky behaviors—drinking too much alcohol, using illegal drugs, smoking cigarettes and skipping school—can alert parents and teachers that serious problems are brewing.
    出自-2016年12月阅读原文
  • Carli says that one of the most significant things about his study is that it provides new early-warning signs for parents, teachers and mental health-care providers.
    出自-2016年12月阅读原文
  • Laura Hamilton, the author of a study on parents who pay for college, will argue in a forthcoming book that college administrations arc overly concerned with the social and athletic activities of their students.
    出自-2015年12月阅读原文
  • And they were more likely to have a criminal record and to be raising a child as a single parent on a very low income.
    2016年6月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section C
  • Chetty finds that communities like Salt Lake city, with high levels of two- parent families and religiosity, are much more likely to see poor children get ahead than communities like Atlanta, with high levels of racial and economic segregation.
    2015年12月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C
  • Many of them are the same that regulate how seeds become dryness-tolerant while still attached to their parent plants.
    2018年6月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B
  • Whereas some of the low-self-control study members are more likely to be single parents with a very low income and the parent is in poor health and likely to be a heavy substance abuser.
    2016年6月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section C
柯林斯高阶英汉双解学习词典释义
英汉词典释义
英英词典释义
  • Noun
    1. a father or mother; one who begets or one who gives birth to or nurtures and raises a child; a relative who plays the role of guardian
  • Verb
    1. bring up;
    "raise a family""bring up children"
行业词典
  • 计算机: (双)亲,父(代),母(体);【NT】上层;父类;