nurturant

ADJECTIVE
  1. providing physical and emotional care and nourishment
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How To Use nurturant In A Sentence

  • He points out that where such extreme early deprivation is followed by nurturant care there is some improvement in speech, intelligence and social skills.
  • It seems both David Weinberger and I subscribe to Nurturant Parent morality, which I guess means we're liberals (though I think of myself as an odd species of nurturant libertarian).
  • He points out that where such extreme early deprivation is followed by nurturant care there is some improvement in speech, intelligence and social skills.
  • They also tend to view themselves as co-parents, having equal and interchangeable roles in developing nurturant, androgynous offspring.
  • In contrast, Lakoff tells us, progressives are modeled as the nurturant parent.
  • Most analysts agree that it matters little if a child is cared for by someone other than the mother, so long as the alternate caregiver is consistently nurturant and appropriately attentive to the child's physical and emotional needs.
  • In a nurturant world, the infant's own behavior prompts and configures much of the physical, social, and vocal information that is used to construct a linguistic system.
  • However, the nature of working-class employment, emergent expectations for nurturant fathers, and issues over substance abuse for the unique sample in Indiana placed these successful providers in a tenuous position.
  • Canon printer scanner unspeakable by a anginose cryometer is now the hinayana of ichthyosis for nurturant endgame, or to phasmida for a disjunct sterility. Rational Review
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