Get Free Checker
[ US /ˈjəŋstɝ/ ]
[ UK /jˈʌŋstɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a young person of either sex
    they're just kids
    she writes books for children
    `tiddler' is a British term for youngster

How To Use youngster In A Sentence

  • I have put a great deal of time, and no little money, into saving York City and it breaks my heart to see players who cannot, or will not, play decently get praise each week while youngsters, who are still learning the game, are pilloried.
  • The judge was also shown sharpened branches and wood used to torment the youngsters. The Sun
  • Linda said changing three sets of nappies, putting a trio of youngsters through school and dealing with triple helpings of teenage tantrums had not always been easy.
  • Over the years, I'd gone from what I fondly imagined to be a switched-on, youngish-minded mum to a rancid, middle-aged harridan, glaring at shrieking texting huddles in the street – youngsters I didn't even know, but would consider lightly birching. It's all too easy to hate teens – try a little love instead | Barbara Ellen
  • Wendy couldn't help but admire the pluck and ingenuity these youngsters showed.
  • The school had also come to an arrangement with a local pub for parents to use its car park when dropping or collecting their youngsters.
  • There is now a real movement in our society to pull our youngsters back from the edge of the precipice of self-annihilation and redirect our children toward a wholesome lifestyle which will allow them a chance to fulfill their potential.
  • The youngster examines minutely curiously: The flavour of that drumstick how?
  • A wonderfully eerie musical score accompanies the two youngsters as they pound miles of wet roads for hours on end, experiencing nothing but uncertainty at every turn.
  • She also queried whether youngsters were being 'cocooned' by over-protective parents afraid that they would come to harm if they went outside the back-garden. Home | Mail Online
View all