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1 guardian
1) (a person who has the legal right to take care of a child (usually an orphan): He became the child's guardian when her parents died.) κηδεμόνας2) (a person who looks after something: the guardian of the castle.) φύλακας• -
2 mind
1.(the power by which one thinks etc; the intelligence or understanding: The child already has the mind of an adult.) νους,μυαλό2. verb1) (to look after or supervise (eg a child): mind the baby.) προσέχω2) (to be upset by; to object to: You must try not to mind when he criticizes your work.) ενοχλούμαι,με πειράζει,με νοιάζει3) (to be careful of: Mind (= be careful not to trip over) the step!) προσέχω4) (to pay attention to or obey: You should mind your parents' words/advice.) προσέχω3. interjection(be careful!: Mind! There's a car coming!) πρόσεχε- - minded- mindful
- mindless
- mindlessly
- mindlessness
- mindreader
- at/in the back of one's mind
- change one's mind
- be out of one's mind
- do you mind!
- have a good mind to
- have half a mind to
- have a mind to
- in one's mind's eye
- in one's right mind
- keep one's mind on
- know one's own mind
- make up one's mind
- mind one's own business
- never mind
- on one's mind
- put someone in mind of
- put in mind of
- speak one's mind
- take/keep one's mind off
- to my mind -
3 orphan
['o:fən](a child who has lost both parents (rarely only one parent): That little girl is an orphan; ( also adjective) an orphan child.) ορφανός -
4 adopt
[ə'dopt]1) (to take (a child of other parents) as one's own: Since they had no children of their own they decided to adopt a little girl.) υιοθετώ2) (to take (something) as one's own: After going to France he adopted the French way of life.) ασπάζομαι, υιοθετώ άποψη, ιδέα κ.λπ.•- adoption- adoptive -
5 baby-sit
verb (to remain in a house to look after a child while its parents are out: She baby-sits for her friends every Saturday.) προσέχω τα παιδιά -
6 bastard
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7 brother
1) (the title given to a male child to describe his relationship to the other children of his parents: I have two brothers.) αδελφός2) (a fellow member of any group ( also adjective): brother officers.) συνάδελφος3) ((plural also brethren ['breƟrən]) a member of a religious group: The brothers of the order prayed together; The brethren met daily.) αδελφός•- brother-in-law -
8 compensate
['kompənseit]1) (to give money to (someone) or to do something else to make up for loss or wrong they have experienced: This payment will compensate (her) for the loss of her job.) αποζημιώνω2) (to undo the effect of a disadvantage etc: The love the child received from his grandmother compensated for the cruelty of his parents.) αναπληρώνω, αντισταθμίζω•- compensation -
9 daughter
['do:tə](a female child (when spoken of in relation to her parents): That is Mary's daughter; She has two daughters.) θυγατέρα,κόρη -
10 eavesdrop
['i:vzdrop]past tense, past participle - eavesdropped; verb((with on) to listen in order to overhear a private conversation: The child eavesdropped on her parents' discussion.) κρυφακούω -
11 go against
1) (to oppose or refuse to act on: A child should never go against his parents' wishes.) αντιτάσσομαι σε2) (to be unacceptable to: This goes against my conscience.) αντιβαίνω σε -
12 keyhole
noun (the hole in which a key of a door etc is placed: The child looked through the keyhole to see if his teacher was still with his parents.) κλειδαρότρυπα -
13 kiss
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14 legitimate
[li'‹itimət]1) (lawful: Is this procedure perfectly legitimate?) νόμιμος, θεμιτός2) ((of a child) born to parents who are married to each other.) νόμιμος, γνήσιος•- legitimacy -
15 pamper
['pæmpə](to treat with great kindness and give a great many special things to (a person): The child was pampered by his parents.) παραχαϊδεύω -
16 shame
[ʃeim] 1. noun1) ((often with at) an unpleasant feeling caused by awareness of guilt, fault, foolishness or failure: I was full of shame at my rudeness; He felt no shame at his behaviour.) ντροπή2) (dishonour or disgrace: The news that he had accepted bribes brought shame on his whole family.) ντροπή3) ((with a) a cause of disgrace or a matter for blame: It's a shame to treat a child so cruelly.) αίσχος4) ((with a) a pity: What a shame that he didn't get the job!) κρίμα2. verb1) ((often with into) to force or persuade to do something by making ashamed: He was shamed into paying his share.) φέρνω στο φιλότιμο2) (to cause to have a feeling of shame: His cowardice shamed his parents.) ντροπιάζω•- shameful- shamefully
- shamefulness
- shameless
- shamelessly
- shamelessness
- shamefaced
- put to shame
- to my
- his shame -
17 sister
['sistə] 1. noun1) (the title given to a female child to describe her relationship to the other children of her parents: She's my sister; my father's sister.) αδερφή2) (a type of senior nurse: She's a sister on Ward 5.) αδελφή,νοσοκόμα3) (a female member of a religious group.) αδελφή,μοναχή4) (a female fellow member of any group: We must fight for equal opportunities, sisters!) αδελφή,συντρόφισσα2. adjective(closely similar in design, function etc: sister ships.) αδελφός -
18 son
(a male child (when spoken of in relation to his parents): He is the son of the manager.) γιος- son of a bitch -
19 tutor
['tju:tə] 1. noun1) (a teacher of a group of students in a college or university.) επιμελητής, επόπτης σπουδών2) (a privately-employed teacher: His parents employed a tutor to teach him Greek.) οικοδιδάσκαλος, καθηγητής για ιδιαίτερα μαθήματα3) (a book which teaches a subject, especially music: I bought a violin tutor.) εγχειρίδιο διδασκαλίας (μουσικής)2. verb(to teach: He tutored the child in mathematics.) διδάσκω, προγυμνάζω- tutorial3. noun(a lesson by a tutor at a college or university: We have lectures and tutorials in history.) φροντιστήριο
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