YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: NOUN
- Any immature animal
- Young people collectively
- United States religious leader of the Mormon Church after the assassination of Joseph Smith; he led the Mormon exodus from Illinois to Salt Lake City, Utah (1801-1877)
- United States baseball player and famous pitcher (1867-1955)
- English poet (1683-1765)
- United States jazz tenor saxophonist (1909-1959)
- British physicist and Egyptologist; he revived the wave theory of light and proposed a three-component theory of color vision; he also played an important role in deciphering the hieroglyphics on the Rosetta Stone (1773-1829)
- United States civil rights leader (1921-1971)
- United States film and television actress (1913-2000)
- The offspring of animals, either a single animal or offspring collectively.
- Offspring collectively.
- People who are young; young beings.
- Young persons considered as a group; youth.
- Offspring; brood.
- The younger generation.
- Offspring.
- With child; pregnant.
- N/A
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: ADJECTIVE
- Not long born; still in the first part of life; not yet arrived at adolescence, maturity, or age; not old; juvenile; -- said of animals.
- Being in the first part, pr period, of growth.
- Having little experience; inexperienced; unpracticed; ignorant; weak.
- Being the junior of two people having the same name.
- Lacking experience; immature.
- Relating to, typical of, or suggestive of youth or early life.
- Newly begun or formed; not advanced.
- Being in an early period of life, development, or growth.
- (of crops) harvested at an early stage of development; before complete maturity
- Being of an early stage in a geologic cycle. Used of bodies of water and land formations.
- (used of living things especially persons) in an early period of life or development or growth
- Suggestive of youth; vigorous and fresh
- Being in its early stage
- Not tried or tested by experience
- Of or belonging to the early part of life.
- In the early part of growth or life; born not long ago.
- As if young; having the look or qualities of a young person.
- Innocent and trustful; credulous; artless
- Resembling a child, or that which belongs to children; becoming a child; meek; submissive; dutiful.
- Like or befitting a child, as in innocence, trustfulness, or candor.
- Exhibiting childlike simplicity and credulity
- Befitting a young child
- Of, like, or suitable for a child; meek; submissive
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: VERB
- To exhibit younging
- To cause to appear younger
- To become or seem to become younger
- N/A
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Being in the first or early stage of growth: as, a young plant; a young tree.
- Being in the first or early stage of life; not long born; not yet arrived at maturity or full age; not old: said of animals: as, a young child; a young man; a young horse.
- In physical geography, exhibiting an early stage of the geographic cycle, when sculpture or dissection is not far advanced.
- Having the appearance and freshness or vigor of youth; youthful in look or feeling; fresh; vigorous.
- He revived the wave theory of light and proposed a three-component theory of color vision
- Before complete maturity
- Suggestive of youth
- Being in the first or early part of existence generally; not yet far advanced, of long duration, or of full development; recent; newly come to pass or to be.
- Having little experience; ignorant; raw; green.
- Pertaining or relating to youth; spent or passed during youth; youthful: as, in his younger days he was very hot-headed.
- Junior: applied to the younger of two persons, especially when they have the same name or title: as, young Mr. Thomas Ray called with a message from his father.
- Newly or lately arrived.
- Vigorous and fresh
- (idiom) (with young) Pregnant. Used of an animal.
- Resembling a child or that which is proper to childhood; becoming to or characteristic of a child; hence, submissive, dutiful, trustful, artless, inexperienced, etc.
- 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.
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: RELATED WORDS
- Small, Vulnerable, Puppyish, Offspring, Junior, Childlike, Formative, Boyish, Immature, Teen, Adolescent, Youthful, Youth, Teenaged, Teenage
- Impish, Whimsical, Boyish, Playful, Guileless, Childish, Girlish, Infant, Child, Childly, Simple, Young, Immature, Naive, Naif
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Small, Vulnerable, Puppyish, Offspring, Junior, Childlike, Formative, Boyish, Immature, Teen, Adolescent, Youthful, Youth, Teenaged, Teenage
- Impish, Whimsical, Boyish, Playful, Guileless, Childish, Girlish, Infant, Child, Childly, Simple, Young, Immature, Naive, Naif
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Solicit applications from organizations that provide young people a continuum of services in social entrepreneurship; young people developing creative approaches that address pressing concerns.
- So, you stop bringing people in, especially stop around young people coming out of high school and young adults come into the workshop.
- Young eventually fired Stirling, citing, among other reasons, the fact that Stirling kept Young out of the company magazine.
- Insurers charge young riders more for insurance because young riders are more likely to have an accident.
- Miss Marston was a cautious and discreet young lady, who had been accustomed to the care of young ladies younger than herself, and Dr.
- YOUNG PROFESSIONALS TO WATCH AWARD APPLICATION The Young Professionals to Watch Award is intended to recognize rising young professionals in the legal technology industry.
- The molest starts at a young age, with perpetrators that are either young or older men.
- Learn how to save from a young age with our Young Saver account.
- Tattoos and piercings: How young is too young?
- Angus Young, Malcolm Young, Cliff Williams and Brian Johnson.
- 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.
YOUNG vs CHILDLIKE: QUESTIONS
- Does residency training influence young doctors' writing?
- Does Brigham Young University give out scholarships?
- How does intrapersonal conflict affect young people?
- Is the Young Victoria (2009) historically accurate?
- How does being a young carer affect a young person?
- Who has been elected as young mayor and deputy young mayor?
- What does the Munro review mean for young people and young people?
- Is young Luke Skywalker worse than young Leia Organa in Rogue One?
- How young is too young for kids to wear contact lenses?
- Who can attend the young men and young women conference?
- 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?