SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: NOUN
- A medicinal plant or the medicine obtained from it.
- In French boston, or in heart solo, the winning of five tricks with a partner.
- In division loo, a pool which has been put up by the dealer alone. Pools which have been contributed to by players who have been looed are double pools.
- A person lacking intelligence or common sense
- Any herbaceous plant having medicinal properties
- N/A
SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: ADJECTIVE
- Having no divisions or branches; not compound.
- Being without figuration or elaboration.
- Being without additions or modifications; mere.
- Having or composed of only one thing, element, or part.
- Not characterized by luxury or elaborate commitments.
- Easy to understand, do, or carry out: : easy.
- Having few parts or features; not complicated or elaborate.
- Exhibiting childlike simplicity and credulity
- Lacking mental capacity and devoid of subtlety
- Easy and not involved or complicated
- Having few parts; not complex or complicated or involved
- Not elaborate in style; unornamented
- Having little or no ornamentation; not embellished or adorned: : plain.
- Not pretentious, guileful, or deceitful; humble or sincere.
- Having or showing little intelligence, education, or experience: : naive.
- Lowly in condition or rank.
- (botany) of leaf shapes; of leaves having no divisions or subdivisions
- Befitting a young child
- Exhibiting childlike simplicity and credulity
- Like or befitting a child, as in innocence, trustfulness, or candor.
- Resembling a child, or that which belongs to children; becoming a child; meek; submissive; dutiful.
- Innocent and trustful; credulous; artless
- Of, like, or suitable for a child; meek; submissive
SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not specially enlarged, dilated, robust, etc.: as, simple femora, not fitted for leaping or not like a grasshopper's.
- In entomology, more particularly— Formed of one lobe, joint, etc.: as, a simple maxilla; the simple capitulum or club of an antenna.
- Normal or usual; ordinary; not duplex: as, the simple teeth of ordinary rodents. See simple-toothed.
- Single: not compound, social, or colonial: as, the simple ascidians; the simple (not compound) eyes or ocelli of an insect.
- In z oöl. and anatomy: Plain; entire; not varied, complicated, or appendaged. See simple-faced.
- In botany, not formed by a union of similar parts or groups of parts: thus, a simple pistil is of one carpel; a simple leaf is of one blade; a simple stem or trunk is one not divided at the base. Compare simple umbel, below.
- Unbroken by valves or crooks: as, a simple tube in a trumpet.
- Not exceeding an octave; not compound: as, a simple interval, third, fifth, etc.
- Undeveloped; not complex: as, simple counterpoint, fugue, imitation, rhythm, time.
- In music: Single; not compound: as, a simple sound or tone.
- Not sheathed or vaginate: as, a simple aculeus or sting.
- Proceeding from ignorance or folly; evidencing a lack of sense or knowledge.
- Deficient in the mental effects of experience and education; unlearned; unsophisticated; hence, silly; incapable of understanding a situation of affairs; easily deceived.
- Without rank; lowly; humble; poor.
- Of little value or importance; insignificant; trifling.
- Plain in dress, manner, or deportment; hence, making no pretense; unaffected; unassuming; unsophisticated; artless; sincere.
- Mere; pure; sheer; absolute.
- Without sauce or condiment; without luxurious or unwholesome accompaniments: as, a simple diet; a simple repast.
- Without elaborate and rich ornamentation; not loaded with extrinsic details; plain; beautiful, if at all, in its essential parts and their relations.
- Having few parts; free from complexity or complication; uninvolved; not elaborate; not modified.
- Without parts, either absolutely, or of a special kind alone considered; elementary; uncompounded: as, a simple substance; a simple concept; a simple distortion.
- Presenting no difficulties or obstacles; easily done, used, understood, or the like; adapted to man's natural powers of acting or thinking; plain; clear; easy: as, a simple task; a simple statement; a simple explanation.
- To gather simples, or medicinal plants.
- To make (the second or low-pressure cylinder of a compound engine) receive live steam direct from the boiler, instead of receiving its working fluid as exhaust from the first or high-pressure cylinder, as in normal series-working. This is done in starting, or occasionally with unusual overload on the engine, and the two cylinders work as two simple engines.
- (botany) of leaf shapes
- Apart from anything else
- Having few parts
- Unornamented
- Apart from anything else; without additions or modifications
- Synonyms Unmixed, elementary.
- A monomial.
- Later. a dissyllabic or trisyllabic foot, with inclusion of the pyrrhic (): opposed to a compound foot in the sense of a foot compounded of these. See pyrrhic.
- That which is not composed of different things, especially not of matter and form, but is either pure matter or pure form
- The object of a simple concept.
- In mineralogy, homogeneous.
- In chem., that has not been decomposed or separated into chemically distinct kinds of matter; elementary. See element, 3.
- Entire; not dentate, serrate, emarginate, etc.; having no special processes, etc.: as, a simple margin.
- Lacking mental capacity and subtlety
- Synonyms Childlike, Childish, Infantile, Infantine. Childlike and childish express that which is characteristic of a child, the former applying to that which is worthy of approbation, or at least does not merit disapproval, and the latter usually to that which is not: as, a childlike freedom from guile; a childish petulance. To express that which belongs to the period of childhood, without qualifying it as good or bad, child or childhood is often used in composition: as, child-toil, childhood-days. Infantile and infantine are applied to the first stages of childhood; no clear distinction between them has yet been established. See youthful.
- Resembling a child or that which is proper to childhood; becoming to or characteristic of a child; hence, submissive, dutiful, trustful, artless, inexperienced, etc.
SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: RELATED WORDS
- Mere, Oversimplified, Obtuse, Primitive, Common, Unproblematic, Elemental, Unsophisticated, Pure, Elegant, Simplified, Plain, Simplistic, Easy, Uncomplicated
- Impish, Whimsical, Boyish, Playful, Guileless, Childish, Girlish, Infant, Child, Childly, Simple, Young, Immature, Naive, Naif
SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Mere, Oversimplified, Obtuse, Primitive, Common, Unproblematic, Elemental, Unsophisticated, Pure, Elegant, Simplified, Plain, Simplistic, Easy, Uncomplicated
- Impish, Whimsical, Boyish, Playful, Guileless, Childish, Girlish, Infant, Child, Childly, Simple, Young, Immature, Naive, Naif
SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Our team likes this simple and nice interface.
- Very simple and easy to use shipping dashboard.
- Simple Homeschool and Home Art Studio on facebook!
- The rustic, simple feel is comforting and comfortable.
- The simple smartphone with a new simplified menu.
- Even in simple parking citation matters this firm goes the extra mile in filing memorandums of law regarding the constitutionality of simple parking tickets.
- Roberto was a simple man with simple tastes and big dreams, he perhaps was not able to fully realize.
- Simple and easy to read a functional resume, keep it simple easy.
- That sounds very simple, and in the vast majority of cases, it is simple.
- Simple Past Present Perfect Simple; Indicazione temporale del passato.
- Childlike abolition, fascinating or first class chlorination, your choice.
- Alone surgery anesthesia consents to medical university of childlike.
- The wives slowly become mothers of their childlike husbands.
- Arms engulf your childlike frame, where have they gone?
- She still has a childlike aversion to tragedies.
- He is childlike, simple, humble, sincere, and forgiving.
- Everything about her seemed terribly fragile and childlike!
- In contrast, his writing was childlike and stilted.
- He retained a childlike curiosity till his end.
- Perry Smith had a childlike understanding of reality.
SIMPLE vs CHILDLIKE: QUESTIONS
- Why choose Lakeside simple cremation Northeast Ohio?
- How are pyrimidines synthesized from simple precursors?
- What grade is present simple present continuous past simple and past continuous?
- Is 'to not/listen' in the past simple or past simple?
- When to use the present simple or the past simple in suggest?
- How to test your knowledge on simple past and present perfect simple?
- How to rewrite sentences in simple present and simple past tense?
- What is the simple subject and simple predicate of box?
- What is the difference of simple interest and simple discount?
- Does a simple pendulum perform linear simple harmonic motion?
- Does being more childlike make you more successful?
- Who plays the Childlike Empress in the Neverending Story?
- Why do people with borderline personality disorder feel more childlike than adults?
- Are You Afraid to have a childlike faith as an adult?
- Why did you read Martha Finley's book childlike faith?
- Is childlike behavior in elderly adults a sign of dementia?
- How did Jennifer Stronach land the role of Childlike Empress?
- Does the Bible instruct us to have childlike faith?
- What is considered childlike in thought according to Mead?