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upbringing

/uhp-bring-ing/US // ˈʌpˌbrɪŋ ɪŋ //UK // (ˈʌpˌbrɪŋɪŋ) //

教养,抚养,养育,教养方式

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the care and training of young children or a particular type of such care and training: His religious upbringing fitted him to be a missionary.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Based on my upbringing, if I am invited to a wedding, I always send a gift.

  • When you get older and you start to see the way other families live, you ask questions about your upbringing.

  • Behavioral genetics looks at where individual differences come from—whether from family upbringing and life experience, or genetic factors.

  • Perhaps because of his lefty upbringing, he became the only editor to sign a union card during an unsuccessful effort to organize the magazine.

  • Our job as parents is to take care of their health, spiritual and moral upbringing.

  • Following her upbringing at Chartwell, the Churchill family home in Kent, Mary Soames, according to Emma Soames, had “a good war.”

  • None of this was expected considering his pampered upbringing.

  • At the same time though, I am a white male from a suburban upper-middle-class upbringing.

  • Considering your multiethnic upbringing, what are some ways in which you look at this country differently than other players?

  • Despite a difficult upbringing, Moran avoids depressing and Dickensian-ish themes.

  • A satisfactory home life can be attained only by the co-operation of both parents in the upbringing of their children.

  • But that is hard to carry out, for the gentleman in Holstein who decides about our upbringing wants me to study for many years.

  • He so far forsook the strait "Manchester School" of his upbringing as to support Macdonald's campaign for protection in 1878.

  • The home is responsible for the upbringing of healthy, intelligent children.

  • Do you know that all these were squeezed out of your dying father by greedy priests, to pay for your upbringing in the cloisters?