Give+birth+to
61birth*/*/ — [bɜːθ] noun 1) [C/U] the occasion when a baby is born We are happy to announce the birth of our son Andrew.[/ex] James has been blind from birth.[/ex] children who have medical problems at birth[/ex] Her place of birth was listed as Oxford.[/ex]… …
62birth — 1. Passage of the offspring from the uterus to the outside world; the act of being born. 2. Specifically, in the human, complete expulsion or extraction from its mother of a fetus, irrespective of gestational age, and regardless of whether or not …
63birth — Synonyms and related words: Altmann theory, DNA, De Vries theory, Galtonian theory, Mendelianism, Mendelism, RNA, Verworn theory, Weismann theory, Weismannism, Wiesner theory, abiogenesis, abortion, accouchement, affiliation, allele, allelomorph …
64birth plan — /ˈbɜθ plæn/ (say berth plan) noun a detailed outline made by a mother about to give birth of the birthing procedures she would like to follow, with regard to surroundings, mobility, pain relief, etc., designed to give guidance to healthcare… …
65birth — noun 1) Nick arrived just in time for the birth Syn: childbirth, delivery, nativity, birthing; blessed/happy event; formal parturition; dated confinement; archaic accouchement, childbed Ant: death 2) the birth of science Syn …
66birth — noun 1) Syn: childbirth, delivery, nativity 2) the birth of science Syn: beginning(s), emergence, genesis, dawn, dawning, rise, start 3) he is of noble birth …
67birth — bÉœËθ v. give birth, bear n. act of being born; act of giving birth; descent, lineage …
68birth — n 1. childbirth, bearing, delivery, parturition, confinement. See bearing (def.2). 2. background, parentage, line, lineage, descent, nativity, origin, race, extraction, derivation; ancestry, family, house, affiliation, blood, blood line, strain,… …
69Birth order — can affect human psychology, though many supposedly formative effects of birth order are instead related to other factors. Birth order is defined as a person s rank by age among his or her siblings. Birth order is often believed to have a… …
70birth control — regulation of the number of children born through the deliberate control or prevention of conception. Cf. family planning (def. 1). [1914, Amer.] * * * Voluntary limiting of human reproduction, using such means as contraception, sexual abstinence …