The stereotype of lazy welfare mothers and fathers is an exception rather than a rule. |
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Prompted by their mothers they formed a group to sing and play traditional Karelian tunes. |
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The most virtuous of mothers can be putty in the hands of the least virtuous of sons. |
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Further research is needed to establish the outcomes that mothers themselves value. |
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Many say a sense of sisterhood motivates them to protect other mothers from the fear and pain they have faced. |
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But many neighborhood mothers took umbrage at the implied criticism of how they handle their children. |
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Something that I feel is important about being a mother is telling other mothers or mothers-to-be what it is really like. |
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Our courts are in such a rush to jail mothers and mothers-to-be that no thought is given to the devastating effect this has on families. |
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Most mothers and mothers-to-be who can hear don't realize how scary becoming a mother can be for a deaf woman. |
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First of all, in case there are any mothers-to-be or mothers still smoking out there, stop now. |
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He also took advantage of the occasion to wish all mothers around the nation a happy Mother's Day. |
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The new day-only service will be able to address some of these issues and also be a place where mothers can learn mothercraft skills. |
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Margaret mothers him by sending others off to do his work and fetch him water. |
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One child, abandoned years earlier at hospital by his mother, has attached himself to Nancy, who mothers the orphan, discipline and all. |
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In contrast, zoo elephants are typically found in groups of two, and two-thirds of female calves are taken from their mothers at an early age. |
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Competition for the few males is now so fierce that dominant females actively push young, would-be mothers out of the picture. |
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Pups learn from their mothers how to forage and what prey items to look for as well as swimming and grooming behaviors. |
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Cubs live with their mothers for about a year and a half, when females often conceive again. |
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Shallow water may allow mothers and calves to detect and avoid predatory sharks. |
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The high female infection rate also spells trouble for the next generation of bears since infected mothers transmit the mites to their offspring. |
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Mammals are the only major group of vertebrates in which mothers are more involved. |
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They are taught by their mothers or other bustards how to recognize and avoid foxes and other dangers. |
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Offspring and their mothers are inseparable during the first few years of the youngster's life. |
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You know, the funny thing about sexism is that most young men, you included, have mothers and sisters whom they love and respect. |
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All those mothers now giving birth at the age of 45 or more should hope that their daughters don't follow their example. |
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In 1962, there were more than 2,000 births to mothers who had 10 or more previous children. |
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Mr McGeehan said a minority of expectant mothers wanted to give birth at home. |
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It is rather a conservative family structure and relatively mean benefits for single mothers that cause the low pregnancy rate. |
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Likewise, a huge number of single mothers have taken advantage of the opportunity to meet men without having to scout for a babysitter. |
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Low-income single mothers are still in the labor market in unprecedented numbers. |
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I employ much less grace than those women did when as single mothers they worked for minimal wages. |
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Who decided that a new organisation would be best for single mothers to enable them to claim upkeep and support from missing fathers? |
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As mentioned before, it's hard enough for single mothers to raise their children. |
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Even unwed single mothers have said that they want more children than they have, even in an unwed state. |
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She is handling cases in Rochdale involving families from Cameroon and Angola and single mothers with children. |
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For single women or mothers with no husband to support them there was no dole. |
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Overall mortality among the fathers was higher than that in the mothers partly because the mean age of the fathers was higher. |
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If mothers are to work they will have to abandon their children, more or less. |
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Before routine electronic ultrasound scans and foetal monitors were introduced almost half of twins born to mothers in Ireland were unexpected. |
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But if the mothers are late returning from the ocean with food, the newly hatched chicks will die. |
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The campaigning women said mothers need more than just a place to give birth, especially young mums. |
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When faced with such increases in medical intervention, more expectant mothers are requesting home births. |
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It's a fantastic service and is there to support mothers before and after labour and is not just about births. |
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For mothers planning natural births, the next few hours are likely to be suspenseful. |
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Second, both doctors and mothers appear to be using C-sections to better time births. |
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In fact, triplets born to older mothers were actually less likely to experience poor birth outcomes than were triplets born to younger mothers. |
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These were more traditionally expected from mistresses, wives, and mothers than from masters, husbands, and fathers. |
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See their trials and tribulations, especially when mothers and daughters differ over dresses. |
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It would thus seem more likely that the mothers would tend to misestimate homogeneously. |
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Full time, well-bonded mothers are dismissed by these angry women as betrayers of their gender. |
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It conveniently also offered birth mothers and their babies second chances for normal lives, without the shame of being unwed and illegitimate. |
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Dr. Lueck observed the organism in the placental tissue of toxemic mothers and identified it in the circulating blood of toxemic patients. |
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By March, 1976, the mothers had organised a school bus service to serve the new school. |
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Refugee mothers don't even get the milk tokens that mothers on benefit are entitled to. |
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Infanticide rates have dropped dramatically in areas where the messiahs operate, but many mothers still give their girl babies away. |
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New mothers are usually stereotyped as being calmer and more serene after they give birth. |
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Many mothers did not want to bear children, especially girls, last year because Ram children were seen as destined to lead miserable lives. |
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The authors of the 1834 report depicted unmarried mothers as scheming seductresses who entrapped young men into paying for their children. |
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Men could protect the honor of mothers by not listing their names in the baptismal record. |
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All of the mothers studied were in spontaneous labor at term with singleton pregnancies in cephalic presentations. |
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The study was limited to babies born to first-time mothers who went into labor spontaneously and at term. |
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Also, children whose mothers gave disapproving looks, criticized them and gave support had lower verbal and math scores on the IQ test. |
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Facilities for washing at the public baths and the launderette, and the use of the bagwash have helped mothers with the pile of dirty clothes. |
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Children living in hostels have lost weight and expectant mothers are malnourished, the report also found. |
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Gaunt mothers and children sat near their tents, sometimes boiling water for tea, a ritual of normalcy that they still maintained. |
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You will also need a car seat, and most mothers feel better using a baby monitor. |
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Young mothers probably have begun to form brand attitudes for baby food some time before actually having their baby. |
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A few metres along, the group of young Spanish mothers are putting on clothes, shaking out sarongs, and collecting sunglasses and children. |
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We asked mothers to choose an income range within which their weekly household income fell, including take-home pay and benefits. |
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His was a family where fathers were absent figures, authoritarians, and mothers were the ones who communicated and shaped the children. |
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Our girls need their mothers and fathers, their aunts and uncles, but they need their big sisters too. |
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When a man goes to prison, wives, sisters, mothers and aunts often work to keep the family together. |
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Impatient mothers began urging their charges to finish up, for heaven's sake, so they could get dressed. |
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Gone were the immaculate mothers with their kids in little sailor suits, shoes and hats, all brand new and matching. |
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Given the way mothers have been atrociously treated, who can blame young women for not being prepared to take the risk. |
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Participants learned the old lullabies and folk songs of their mothers and grandmothers joyfully and enthusiastically. |
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The tragedy of the savage, brutal murders perpetrated on two young mothers a few years ago still lingers. |
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As I was saying, if our mothers can't browbeat us into getting married, what hope has a faceless government bureaucracy? |
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Abusive and at-risk mothers were more negative in their appraisals of child behavior than were control mothers. |
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The elder clan mothers in matrilineal Iroquois society had the power to choose the sachems, or peace chiefs, for each of their clans. |
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For we mothers and fathers often wish to escape the terrifying job of being responsible for someone else day in, day out, for 18 or so years. |
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Doubtless also they deck out their mothers and wives and sisters in serge gowns and Dolly Varden hats. |
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Ez wore that old black brilliantine dress of mothers and a wide brimmed hat. |
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What it is doing is trying to hitchhike on those sonorous words that bring tears to the eyes of mothers every weekend. |
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The figures have alarmed doctors and midwives who fear the increasing popularity of Caesareans is putting mothers and newborns at risk. |
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It would be outrageous if this child's death did not result in improved treatment for other mothers and newborns. |
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The nurturing role of mothers is represented and celebrated as a mother cow cares for her newborn calf. |
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Babies born to mothers who have used substances may feed poorly or have trouble with breastfeeding. |
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One explanation of this could be that the mothers exchange more tenderness with the baby while breastfeeding. |
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Infants may be infected by their mothers during pregnancy, childbirth or, rarely, while breastfeeding. |
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The more people see mothers breastfeeding their babies, the more normal it will become in our society. |
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Why should intuitive mothers reduce themselves down to our stupid logocentric system of male-domination? |
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There were examples of mothers who iced cakes, kept chickens, and took in laundry and lodgers to help with finance. |
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Although only two trials provided data on requirement of nalaxone by neonates, it was lower in neonates whose mothers had had epidural analgesia. |
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A further 500,000 visits by new mothers were made to specially designed Plunket rooms. |
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Each claimed at the court martials at Tidworth he had stayed at home to deal with family problems and their respective mothers had been unwell. |
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Plump mothers holding babies in their arms stood right at the ring apron, while their little children looked up saucer-eyed at this god. |
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Part of preparing youth for the workplace is preventing them from winding up as unwed teenage mothers on the dole. |
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Today, some states continue to differentiate between unwed mothers and fathers for inheritance purposes. |
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Student mothers are especially over-worked because in addition to school-work they must do the unwaged work of mother everywhere. |
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Even the youngish people around me seemed untowardly geeky and uncool, like their mothers had dressed them all. |
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I recognized my mothers abnormally neat handwriting at once and I began to read. |
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A majority of mothers and 79 per cent of fathers frequently work at unsocial hours. |
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He eventually took over his mothers fleet of ships and appeared to inherit her nautical skills. |
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These included mothers who took antipsychotics, other antidepressants, or antianxiety medications. |
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Critics suggest mothers in more affluent areas request the operations to avoid the experience of natural birth. |
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Sure enough she was wearing her Sunday morning church dress, and all the way up on the landing, Troy could smell her mothers lilac perfume. |
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By proclaiming that mothers are the best option for the children in every case, they are set up for unreal expectations. |
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Anti-D is given to rhesus negative mothers who have given birth to rhesus positive babies. |
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Most babies are bottle-fed, but some mothers still breast-feed their babies until the first teeth appear. |
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For instance, drug-using mothers have been characterized as egocentric with a narcissistic orientation toward their children. |
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They are often young mothers with small children, mothers who have no patience and who are quick with their hands. |
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Illegitimacy was no longer stigmatized and unmarried mothers were given all the rights of married women. |
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They tried to make unmarried mothers pay more tax and get less benefit than married women. |
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When I asked how many unmarried mothers in the town do not pay rent or council tax, I was told it was none of my business. |
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A saline abortion is a solution of salt saline that is injected into the mothers womb. |
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Teenage heterosexual boys, these mothers know, are bound to bring heartache. |
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Watching their offspring struggle for glory on the tennis court, mothers and fathers are among the most reviled people in sport. |
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When some local mothers got together to have a mass feeding session in the town centre, people walked past with furrowed brows and mutterings. |
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Movies about poor, uneducated mothers forced to work punishing jobs are even rarer. |
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Our mothers cooked real food from raw ingredients, making magical meals out of very little. |
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The scenes were repeated all along the border area, with tearful and emotional reunions between mothers and daughters, brothers and cousins. |
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Is she suggesting that ALL mothers should not work but be mummies full time? |
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She said there had been claims the mothers and fathers who walked their children up the road to school were bad parents. |
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The most difficult task for the mothers was to explain the concept of abstract nouns and mimetic words in Korean. |
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Even those daughters who identified their fathers as the abuser blamed their mothers for failing to protect them. |
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They could educate young people about abstinence and require teenage mothers to attend school and live at home to qualify for benefits. |
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Allergen avoidance measures included breast feeding with mothers on a low allergen diet, use of acaricides, and mattress covers. |
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My heart has ached for these helpless mothers and for the little unwelcome babes when I have taken them into my arms. |
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Her comparison of older mothers to teenage mums and her call for government intervention is likely to prove highly controversial. |
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That was the rallying cry to mothers today as Breastfeeding Awareness Week got under way in south Essex. |
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Then more piglets die after they have been born, by being laid on by their mothers or whatever the problem is. |
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At the same time, as the arrest rate for juvenile delinquency and crime rose in 1943 and 1944, commentators accused mothers of neglect. |
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Sometimes mothers will really put up a fuss about me taking their new whelps and putting them in a puppy box. |
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Not all shih-tzu mothers do what they are suppose to do, and in these cases, a breeder must act quickly to save the newly whelped shih-tzu puppy. |
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For example, mothers high in trait negative affectivity may have more negative social information processing styles. |
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What chance do they stand of growing up with a taste for wholesome, nourishing food when their mothers cannot be bothered to feed them correctly? |
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That is about 540,000 people of all ages, including the elderly, single mothers and children. |
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It featured two mothers whose daughters had been lured into relationships by the men. |
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In restaurants and malls, however, caregiving by mothers exceeded that of fathers by a wide margin. |
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The familiar lament by mothers everywhere may have a kernel of scientific truth. |
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It's well-known that, in the status race, mothers bring up the rear, ranking equally with the disabled and the elderly. |
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Using a kanga mothers carry babies close to their bodies in a sling, even while working in the fields, at home, or in shops. |
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Young mothers who were pale with fear and shock held their children as close as they could to protect them. |
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Couples embraced, mothers held their children close, men nodded to each other. |
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Must courts hold mothers accountable when they make false statements regarding paternity? |
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The two of us mothers were not sure if my boy kid and her girl kid would get along and go sledding while we skied, but we risked it. |
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The mothers had already exchanged new ways to use their witchery and little anecdotes about the past. |
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He said that low birth weight babies delivered by undernourished mothers are also at a risk of becoming obese later on. |
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Celebrity makeup artist Meg Thompson has created a makeup kit for young women that even mothers would approve of. |
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Mink kits remain in the same cage as their mothers until weaned at the age of seven to eight weeks. |
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Too much pressure is put on mothers to be back in their skinny jeans by their six week check-up. |
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One theme that recurs throughout the weekly course topics is the influence of mothers on fathers and vice versa. |
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Breastfeeding mothers need to drink extra to make enough milk for their babies. |
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Rabbit mothers only feed their babies twice a day and rabbit milk is very rich. |
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These imagined and real mothers provide an important counter to the negative images of black womanhood circulated in other media. |
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The legal system is skewed towards mothers and, as a result, some women abuse this for their own means, she claims. |
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The implication is that, left to their own resources, most mothers and fathers are unlikely to cope today. |
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So why do we not demand more of these productivity gains back in practical support for working mothers and fathers? |
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Despite this, many working mothers encounter few problems and have supportive employers. |
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The failure of schools to offer working mothers more flexibility, she believes, remains the major stumbling block. |
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This happened even though the mothers spoke only in Korean when they interacted with their children. |
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In a typical argument, Bayle asks us to imagine a group of mothers who allow their daughters to attend a ball unchaperoned. |
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To develop a sense of manliness, boys in rural areas are separated from their mothers at the age of six. |
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However, mothers and grannies of the bride need not be alarmed, as wraps, boleros and capes are very much in vogue for the service at least. |
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What they show is that the rapid influx of mothers with young children into the workplace has leveled off and fallen, slightly. |
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Laughter resounds throughout cozy kitchens while mothers bake gingerbread and children decorate sugar cookies. |
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The mothers expressed sadness and regret when there was no father-child relationship. |
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Adoptive mothers should be counseled on the benefits of induced lactation through hormonal therapy or mechanical stimulation. |
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Because of feeding difficulties, the mothers of these infants may benefit from lactation consultation and occupational therapy. |
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Most mothers who fulfil the alpha mom stereotype don't want to describe themselves like that. |
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Yearling females stayed closer to their mothers than yearling males during all months except June, the month of initial family breakup. |
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Native mothers never sat their babies down long enough to need these items. |
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There are many safe and effective herbal remedies for mothers to take before they turn to pharmaceutical drugs. |
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Under the old code, mothers were assigned priority in matters of child custody, and fathers were granted visiting rights. |
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Two of the participants' mothers spoke Lao as their native language but were also able to speak Hmong with ease. |
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Some of our mothers used to bake with lard or render down cod fat and beat it up with lemon juice to provide shortening for baking. |
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Forget yummy mummies, those mothers take style and success to a whole new level. |
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Maternal custody can only perform this repatriation for mixed-race children born to mothers of African descent, however. |
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Doctors may test pregnant mothers to see if there is too much amniotic fluid. |
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Infants brighten up in her presence and mothers listen to her with almost child-like zealousness. |
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Pacifist feminists, for example, embraced their identity as mothers to justify their refusal to support the war. |
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That has become the accepted theory, and anyone talking seriously about refrigerator mothers today would be considered a crackpot. |
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Emergency nappy changing is a skill most mothers become quite adept at. |
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They were defeated by kerchiefed mothers and grandmothers silently walking in a circle day after day displaying their grief and the General's crimes for all to see. |
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At a table for four, two beautifully dressed mothers had unsnapped their toile-print duffel bags, which converted into baby seats for their infants. |
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But mothers who abandon their babies anonymously have no easy way to learn of the child's status or prove their maternity in time to appear and contest the adoption. |
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She said having other women supporting mothers during pregnancy gives them more confidence in giving birth naturally, without medical intervention. |
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Even with all the rhetoric about mothers and daughters, what the film seems to be saying is that women in your life will mess you up, and you should just take it. |
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Teenagers cycled past on bikes and young mothers pushing prams made their leisurely way down the street, stopping occasionally to do a bit of window shopping. |
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Can we tighten our belts, knuckle down and use that knowledge that our forefathers and mothers gave us? |
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Old people too and mothers with babies and kiddies out shopping. |
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New mothers want two hammocks made of soft, shapeless cotton sewn together and viewed only in a darkened room. |
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The media goes into a frenzy when egregious examples of bad mothers occur, like Susan Smith or Casey Anthony. |
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Kent herself has said the movie is about parenting, the unsayable extremes of what mothers can feel. |
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At the very worst, real mothers suffer by analogy with bawds and pimps. |
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Those variables and other geographic identifiers were useful when predicting the price of child care facing mothers across different regions of the country. |
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Many new mothers remain reluctant to take such medications while nursing. |
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A lot of mothers and fathers will be missing items of clothing from the wardrobe as everything from socks to neckties were used for the tying in the three-legged race. |
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The old ladies and pregnant mothers who crowd the middle lines, and dominate the Jacuzzi, are nowhere to be seen. |
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Expectant mothers can register at any maternity or child welfare centre. |
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On a Freudian level, this social stigma against bad mothers reflects a deep-seated anxiety about maternal relationships. |
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The truth is that mothers will never be fully utilized in the workforce until fathers are fully utilized in the home. |
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Some of the autistic children born to mothers who took thalidomide also had misshapen ears, as well as abnormalities in the nerves of the head and face. |
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The fathers and mothers were asked to choose together a typical workday and nonwork day, usually a weekend day, and then to each fill out a time diary for those two days. |
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It is not uncommon for nursing working mothers to make a lunchtime dash for a car, plug into the cigarette lighter and pump away in the parking lot. |
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And she shrewdly examines the inequity of the fact that mothers are held to such a higher bar than fathers. |
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All mothers had been tested for HIV antibodies and were HIV seronegative. |
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The author of the report on the practical efforts of Dublin mothers against the heroin scourge supported the call for more resources to be made available. |
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And 38 percent of children whose mothers used cocaine while pregnant are developmentally delayed. |
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Memories are fading about their dire predictions for mothers on welfare after the reforms of 1996, which were way off. |
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When research doesn't go their way, or simply confirms what mothers intuitively know, feminist social affairs writers will go to great lengths to cover it up. |
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They had rarely seen their own fathers carry small children unless their mothers were ill. |
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Here is a holistic health care wrap-up that offers a few hours of relaxation as well as a complete rejuvenating experience for mothers of all ages. |
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The Underground Man is full of overprotective mothers who will do anything to safeguard their errant sons. |
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She did not spearhead initiatives to help mothers rejoin the world of work. |
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And she is focused on her so-far-unsuccessful quest to get a puppy from her mothers or Santa Claus or anyone who will listen. |
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These guideposts transformed my negative thoughts into useful work, the way Lamaze mothers learn to re-imagine labor pains as muscle contractions. |
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We have created a romanticized image that mothers are supposed to be sexless and epitomize the perfect homemaker. |
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In baby talk, mothers simplify and formalize their behavior. |
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Other high-profile women also became single mothers after disillusioning experiences with men. |
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Young mothers struggle alone to bring up a growing proportion of children in relative poverty and more and more old people live out their days in uncared-for solitude. |
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And I think one of the mothers who said she didn't speak like that, when we recorded it, she was in fact probably one of the more pronounced people using baby talk. |
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The prep-school-teacher-turned-cultural critic drives working mothers to fits with contrarian essays on modern domestic life. |
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Yet the moment we become mothers we are supposed to switch off our ambitions, tighten our belts and shuffle off into the sunset with a baby buggy and dark roots. |
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Franco and colleagues have demonstrated that infants born to smoking mothers have a higher arousal threshold to auditory stimuli during REM sleep. |
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At the end of the 20-30 minute session, mothers are able to peruse parenting resources provided by the library and borrow picture books with the babies. |
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Similarly, the breastfeeding wars have forced mothers to take sides in what is often a moral rather than scientific debate. |
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There was an octogenarian carrying her headshot and two mothers hauling along antsy kids. |
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A battle is raging for the hearts and wallets of new mothers as two companies compete to distribute free samples of baby products in the country's biggest hospitals. |
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Societies that do the least to support mothers and child-bearing have more abortions. |
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In short, the wilderness skills and outdoor abilities that the founding mothers intended. |
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In a Finnish study, mothers of anencephalic children were more likely than matched control patients to remember having a cold in the first trimester of pregnancy. |
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With less income, many prospective mothers fear another mouth to feed. |
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As a general rule, societies that do the most to support mothers and child-bearing have the fewest abortions. |
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Doting mothers adored the clothes, and the long flowing curls, but their sons did not like them at all, and found them uncomfortable and sissyish. |
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All over America, single mothers with nothing like the advantages or prospects of Jeff, Lou and Tom are being told to sink or swim, and their children along with them. |
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There, she and other mothers can take ministry-sponsored courses, including on cooking and avoiding marital conflict. |
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Working-class and middle-class mothers of Cuban heritage were questioned about their modes of accommodation to America in terms of language proficiencies. |
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Labor force participation among the mothers of special needs and chronically ill children is shockingly low. |
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By 1933 trees had been planted in Washington to honor the mothers of presidents, mothers of the nation, and the mother of the Unknown Soldier buried at Arlington Cemetery. |
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When our founding mothers and fathers wrote the Constitution, they took a major step forward in terms of progressive policies, by abolishing capital punishment. |
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She spoke of organizing a Million Mom march for all mothers who have lost a child. |
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The project helped young mothers prepare and adjust to motherhood. |
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If they had passed, presumably mothers who drink during pregnancy could be charged with felonies. |
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In the coal-fired kitchen, you'll learn the cunning ways that mothers bulked out mince pies with apple and carrot, and baked Christmas cakes in the shape of Anderson shelters. |
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Perhaps the predominance of single mothers as opposed to single fathers is also a result of social expectations. |
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Mermaids are supposed to abound in the ponds and ditches in this neighbourhood. Careful mothers use them as bugbears to prevent little children from going too near the water. |
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Figures from National Health Service Scotland show that new mothers from more advantaged backgrounds are on average 12 years older than those from poorer areas. |
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Both the mothers frequently use abusive language and spank their children. |
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No sooner than Amy and Chasity had stepped out the door, a train of the offending boys and their mothers were making their way towards Chasity's brownstone. |
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The girls helped their mothers prepare a simple meal as the men smoked outside and reflected on their abject state. |
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Stand with the pink-sneakered Texas legislator and her fight to allow mothers to abort babies past the 20th week of pregnancy? |
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Now that a Danish study has associated maternal use of acetaminophen with ADHD, mothers are likely to panic. |
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So Bandar enjoyed none of the prestige or the clout that well-connected mothers bring to their sons in the Kingdom. |
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Orangutan offspring stay with their mothers until they're seven or eight years old, but orangutans are on the lower end of the sociability scale among great apes. |
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Consequently, linked blocks of genes are inherited intact in the form of whole chromosomes from fathers, while loci on chromosomes from mothers assort randomly. |
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Her original statement caused an uproar from working mothers who argued Paltrow was out of touch and elitist. |
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To prove this she interviewed mothers who had given birth prematurely and discovered that a high proportion of them had suffered stress events in pregnancy. |
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The ranks of the gold star Mothers were populated with many women with white hair, mothers to children lost in the Vietnam War. |
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Betty Friedan put the feelings of our mothers to words, publishing The feminine Mystique. |
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We cannot keep judging mothers by a primitive, antiquated, simplistic standard. |
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The bye bye is being sung, incidentally, by mothers to their babies condemned to death by King Herod. |
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Such mothers were simultaneously seductresses and parasites. |
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Women have been socialized so strongly to become mothers that we often feel guilty, unfeminine or a failure if we are not sure whether we want children. |
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Roundworms, also know as ascarids, are transmitted from mothers to nursing kittens or through the cat ingesting eggs or other hosts that are infected with the eggs. |
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Women labored in groups, with female neighbors, midwives, aunts and mothers around for womanly support. |
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The excited squeals of hungry piglets and the bleats of insistent lambs seem better designed for pestering reluctant mothers than for conveying a simple message of need. |
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The strike threat could further fray the shattered nerves of dozens of bleary-eyed wives, mothers and sisters who remained camped outside Carandiru. |
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I spoke with mothers fretful and tearful about their bleak prospects but struggling to maintain a facade of optimism and cheerfulness in the presence of their children. |
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So, I sing songs to the mothers, and the mothers begin to weep. |
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Some of the mothers were accused of having Munchausen's syndrome by proxy. |
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In fact, the main purpose of last night's meeting seemed to be about recruiting mothers to be troop leaders and forming new troops for these interested girls. |
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The 25-year study of babies born to mothers who were social drinkers found that even moderate levels of alcohol consumption had measurable effects on the babies. |
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Furthermore, marriage contracts show that mothers contributed regularly to their daughters' dowries with amounts that were even superior to what they left to cadets by will. |
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Moreover, at 6 months, the mothers of back sleepers reported fewer instances in which their infants had trouble sleeping than did the mothers of stomach sleepers. |
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The trio brings appropriate whimsy to Gorey's playfully macabre material, an accordion main soundtrack to besotted mothers and weeping chandeliers. |
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It could mean that donors would lose their right to anonymity once their offspring turn 18, allowing children to trace their biological mothers and fathers. |
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In my local supermarket, I see harassed Italian mothers shoving packets of pre-washed salads into their shopping baskets as well as ready-made pizzas. |
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Beside me in the line were ragged mothers with their children in their arms, and at their feet, old infirm men, and young men who are in destitute circumstances. |
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My team and I learned that family units are split up and calves are taken from mothers and moved to other parks. |
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Some women who want to be mothers and have maternal love to give should have the ability to do just that. |
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In Turkey, some mothers find their paradise at the Esme Beltagy Center in Esenler, while others see paradise receding. |
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The nice thing about your mother is that she doesn't really care what you do, ideally, because some mothers are snobs, and that causes great problems. |
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However, more often than not surrogate mothers are reimbursed for their services. |
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In New Zealand and The Netherlands it's tradition that children who are still in primary school serve their mothers breakfast in bed. |
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Cartoonish, wide-eyed infants cling to their mothers or play together low to the ground. |
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Too many expectant mothers go to the delivery room terrified of what may be about to happen. |
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But more than just a how-to, we wrote the Geek Mom book to encourage mothers and geeklings to be proud of their true selves. |
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New mothers frequently complain that their partner won't get up to change a wet nappy or comfort a grizzling baby. |
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The power structure of the family is being shared by wives and husbands, mothers and fathers. Both hold the purse strings. |
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Girls generally received instruction from their mothers in the art of spinning, weaving, and sewing. |
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The mothers likened his behaviour to the last days of Control, who had died in harness, thanks to Haydon, of a broken heart. |
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Cats knead with their paws when happy, just as they kneaded when feeding from their mothers as kittens. |
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Momzillas are mothers whose lives are defined by their children, and more specifically, by their children's accomplishments. |
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Contrary to a popular image of drug sales as a lucrative profession, many of the employees were living with their mothers by necessity. |
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Young mothers can enjoy childcare support from their own mothers, who continue living nearby in the same camp. |
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Most species hunt for three to five hours each day and nursing mothers up to eight hours each day. |
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This knowledge is mostly transferred by mothers to daughters, unlike simian primates, where knowledge is generally passed on to both sexes. |
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Often they updated strategies their mothers used when they were growing up in poor families. |
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