单词 | family |
释义 | familyfam‧i‧ly /ˈfæməli/ ●●● S1 W1 noun (plural families) Entry menu MENU FOR familyfamily1 closely related group2 all your relations3 children4 family size/pack etc5 group of animals/things6 she’s/he’s family7 in the family way Word OriginWORD ORIGINfamily ExamplesOrigin: 1400-1500 familia ‘people living in a house’, from famulus ‘servant’EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatora group of people who are related to each other► family Collocations a group of people who are related to each other, especially a mother, father, and their children all living together: · He comes from a family of eight children.· A lot of the families living in this area are very poor.member of a family: · Pearl is the last surviving member of her family.the Armstrong/Mitchell/Jones family (=the family with this name): · Various members of the Kennedy family were at the funeral.immediate family (=your closest relatives): · Only her immediate family knew she had heart disease.nuclear family (=a family consisting of a mother, a father, and their children): · Having an intact nuclear family does not guarantee that a child will turn out well.extended family (=including cousins, grandparents etc): · My extended family usually gets together at holidays.one-parent family/single-parent family (=a family in which there is only one parent): · Single-parent families are much more common these days.big/large/small family: · I grew up in a large family in the South.· The cost of sending kids to college - even for a small family - is extremely high. ► parents someone's mother and father: · Do you get on well with your parents?· Parents need to become more involved in their children's school activities. ► folks informal your family, especially your parents: · She's gone back home to see her folks.· My folks were waiting for me at the station. ► background the type of family and social class that you grew up in: · Most of his friends were from similar middle-class backgrounds.· In our class we have children of all different religious and ethnic backgrounds. things that happen in a family or belong in a family► family: family home/business/argument etc something that belongs to a family or happens in a family: · I stopped going on family holidays when I was 15.· When her parents died, she took over the family business.· We're planning a big family celebration when my cousin gets married. ► domestic: domestic violence/trouble/argument etc fighting, arguments, or problems between members of the same family: · Victims of domestic violence are often reluctant to tell the police.· I'm worried about Jim - I think he may be having some domestic problems. ► run in the family if an illness or type of behaviour runs in the family , it is common in that family: · Asthma seems to run in our family.· Good looks must run in the family. someone who belongs to your family► relative/relation someone who is a member of your family although they do not live with you: · Over a hundred friends and relatives came to the wedding.relative/relation of: · Some relatives of the victims are planning to sue.close relative/relation (=someone who is closely related to you): · When he died, there were no children or close relatives to contact.distant relative/relation (=someone who is not closely related to you): · We have some distant relations in Australia that we've never met.no relation to somebody (=used to say someone is not related to someone else with the same name): · Marty Rogers (no relation to Governor Rogers) is one of the governor's biggest critics. ► family member/member of the family someone who is part of your family: · Only close family members are allowed to visit her.· Woods says she's not sure if any of the members of her family have read the book. ► next of kin the person or people who are most closely related to you, for example your husband or mother, and who need to be told when you die or if you have a serious accident: · The college need to know your next of kin in case something happens to you.· The police will not release the dead man's name until his next of kin have been informed. to belong to the same family► be related if two people are related , they are both members of the same family - use this about cousins, grandparents etc, but not about your parents or your brothers and sisters: · "I didn't know you and Ted were related." "Yes, Ted's wife is my sister."be related to: · John told me he was related to Mel Gibson - is that true? ► be descended from to be related to someone who lived a long time ago, especially someone famous or important: · She is descended from the Duke of Marlborough.· Many of the plantation owners were descended from American missionaries. people who are related to you because of marriage► mother-in-law/son-in-law etc someone who is related to you because of a marriage, for example, your mother-in-law is the mother of your wife or husband, and your sister-in-law is the sister of your wife or husband, or the wife of your brother: · Surprisingly, my mother-in-law and I get along very well.· My sister and brother-in-law are coming to visit next week. ► stepmother/stepson/stepsister etc someone who becomes your mother, sister, son etc when you or a person you are related to marries for a second time: · After my mother got remarried, it took a while to get used to having a stepfather.· She has two sisters and a stepbrother. ► half-brother/half-sister someone who is the child of one of your parents but not both of them: · Alyssa has a half-brother she's never met because her parents don't speak to each other any more. ► by marriage if you are related to someone by marriage , they are married to someone in your family or you are married to someone in their family: · John's my cousin by marriage. ► in-laws informal the parents of your husband or wife: · We lived with my in-laws until we had enough money to buy a house of our own. people who were in the same family as you a long time ago► ancestor a member of your family who lived a long time ago, especially hundreds of years ago: · My ancestors originally came from Ireland.· During the festival of Obon, Japanese show respect to their dead ancestors. ► family people that you are related to who lived a long time ago: · Her family came to America from Scotland in about 1750.· Our family has lived around here for hundreds of years. ► descendant someone who is a relative of a person who lived and died a long time ago, especially a famous or important person: · Frederick and Bertha moved to Iowa in 1852, and their descendants still live in the area.descendant of: · Paul claims to be a descendant of King Charles I. ► forefathers people in your family who lived a long time ago: · His forefathers helped settle this area a century and a half ago. WORD SETS► Biologyaerobic, adjectiveafterbirth, nounalgae, nounalimentary canal, nounamber, nounameba, nounamino acid, nounamoeba, nounanaconda, nounanaerobic, adjectiveandrogynous, adjectiveantibody, nounantigen, nounantitoxin, nounappendage, nounarm, nounarmour, nounasexual, adjectiveassimilation, nounatrophy, verbaviary, nounbacteria, nounbacteriology, nounbarnacle, nounbile, nounbinocular vision, nounbio-, prefixbiochemistry, nounbiodegradable, adjectivebiodiversity, nounbiohazard, nounbiological, adjectivebiological clock, nounbiology, nounbiomass, nounbiome, nounbiosphere, nounblind, nounbrain, nounbreathe, verbbreed, verbbreed, nounbreeding, nounbristle, nounbulb, nouncapsule, nouncarbohydrate, nouncarbon dioxide, nouncarnivore, nouncell, nouncellular, adjectivecellulose, nouncentral nervous system, nouncervical, adjectivecholesterol, nounchromosome, nouncirculation, nouncirculatory, adjectiveclass, nounclone, nouncold-blooded, adjectiveconceive, verbconch, nounconnective tissue, nouncopulate, verbcoral reef, nouncornea, nouncoronary, adjectivecorpuscle, nouncortex, nouncortisone, nouncowrie, nouncrab, nouncrawfish, nouncrayfish, nouncreature, nouncross, verbcrossbreed, nounculture, nouncytoplasm, noundecay, verbdecay, noundecompose, verbdefecate, verbdenizen, noundextrose, noundiaphragm, noundigest, verbdigestion, noundigestive, adjectiveDNA, noundorsal, adjectivedry rot, nounduct, noundwarf, noundwarf, adjectiveecological, adjectiveecology, nounecosystem, nounegg, nounejaculate, verbembryo, nounembryonic, adjectiveenzyme, nounepidermis, nounevolution, nounevolutionary, adjectiveexcrement, nounexcrescence, nounexcrete, verbexcretion, nounexhale, verbexoskeleton, nounextinction, nounfaeces, nounfamily, nounfang, nounfat, nounfatty acid, nounfauna, nounfeces, nounfeed, verbfemale, adjectivefemale, nounferment, verbferment, nounfertile, adjectivefertility, nounfertilize, verbfission, nounflank, nounflatulence, nounflesh, nounfleshy, adjectiveflightless, adjectiveflora, nounfoetal, adjectivefoetus, nounfoliage, nounfossil, nounfreak, nounfreshwater, adjectivefructose, noungamete, nounganglion, noungene, noungene pool, noungenera, genetic, adjectivegenetic code, noungenetic engineering, noungenetic fingerprinting, noungenetics, noungenome, noungenus, noungestation, noungland, nounglandular, adjectiveglucose, noungluten, noungonad, noungrass snake, noungrow, verbgrowth, nounhabitat, nounhaemoglobin, nounhearing, nounheart, nounhemisphere, nounherbivore, nounhereditary, adjectiveheredity, nounhermaphrodite, nounhibernate, verbhistamine, nounhoming, adjectivehormone, nounhost, nounimpregnate, verbimpulse, nounincubate, verbindigenous, adjectiveinfected, adjectiveinfertile, adjectiveinfest, verbingest, verbinhale, verbinseminate, verbinsensate, adjectiveinsulin, nounintegument, nounintercourse, nouninterferon, nounintestine, nouninvertebrate, nouninvoluntary, adjectiveiris, nounjaw, nounjelly, nounkidney, nounkrill, nounlactate, verblactation, nounlactic acid, nounleech, nounleg, nounlesser, adjectivelichen, nounlife, nounlife cycle, nounlife form, nounligament, nounlimb, nounlimpet, nounlipid, nounliver, nounliving fossil, nounlocomotion, nounlymph, nounlymph node, nounmale, adjectivemale, nounmammal, nounmandible, nounmate, nounmate, verbmembrane, nounmetabolism, nounmetabolize, verbmetamorphosis, nounmicrobe, nounmicrobiology, nounmicroorganism, nounmicroscopic, adjectivemigrate, verbmigratory, adjectivemiscarriage, nounmolar, nounmorphology, nounmotor, adjectivemould, nounmouth, nounmucous membrane, nounmucus, nounmulticellular, adjectivemuscle, nounmuscular, adjectivemutant, nounmutate, verbmutation, nounnatural history, nounnatural selection, nounnature, nounneck, nounnectar, nounnerve, nounnervous, adjectivenervous system, nounneural, adjectiveneuro-, prefixneurology, nounnode, nounnose, nounnostril, nounnucleic acid, nounnucleus, nounnutrient, nounnutriment, nounoesophagus, nounoestrogen, nounolfactory, adjectiveoptic, adjectiveorgan, nounorganic, adjectiveorganic chemistry, nounorganism, nounorifice, nounossify, verbosteo-, prefixoutgrowth, nounova, ovary, nounoverwinter, verboviduct, nounoviparous, adjectiveovulate, verbovum, nounparasite, nounpathogen, nounpedigree, nounpelvic, adjectivepelvis, nounpenile, adjectivepenis, nounpepsin, nounperiod, nounperspiration, nounperspire, verbphotosynthesis, nounphylum, nounpigment, nounpigmentation, nounplankton, nounplasma, nounpollinate, verbpostnatal, adjectivepregnancy, nounpregnant, adjectivepremature, adjectiveprenatal, adjectiveproduct, nounproliferation, nounpropagate, verbprotein, nounprotoplasm, nounprotozoan, nounpuberty, nounpulmonary, adjectivepulp, nounpulsation, nounputrefy, verbputrid, adjectivered blood cell, nounregurgitate, verbrenal, adjectivereproduce, verbreproduction, nounreproductive, adjectiverespiration, nounrespiratory, adjectiverespire, verbretina, nounroot, nounrot, verbrot, nounruff, nounsac, nounsaliva, nounsalivary gland, nounsalivate, verbsaltwater, adjectivescale, nounscallop, nounscaly, adjectivesebaceous, adjectivesecrete, verbsecretion, nounsemen, nounsense organ, nounsensory, adjectiveserum, nounsex, nounsex, verbsexless, adjectivesexual intercourse, nounsheath, nounshell, nounsibling, nounskeletal, adjectiveskeleton, nounskin, nounskull, nounspasm, nounspasmodic, adjectivespecies, nounspecimen, nounsperm, nounspiderweb, nounspinal cord, nounspine, nounspineless, adjectivestarch, nounstem cell, nounstimulate, verbstimulus, nounstrain, nounsubject, nounsubspecies, nounsucker, nounsucrose, nounsweat, verbsweat, nounsweat gland, nounsymbiosis, nounsystemic, adjectivetail, nountaxonomy, nounteeth, testosterone, nountest-tube baby, nountissue, nountrachea, nountube, noununicellular, adjectiveurethra, nounuric, adjectiveurinate, verburine, nounvariety, nounvector, nounvein, nounvenom, nounvenomous, adjectiveventricle, nounvertebra, nounvertebrate, nounvivisection, nounwarm-blooded, adjectivewean, verbwildlife, nounwindpipe, nounyolk, noun COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY Meanings 1 & 2adjectives► the whole family Phrases· We invited the whole family round. ► all the family· This is a game which all the family can enjoy. ► somebody's immediate family (=closest relations)· What if one of your immediate family were disabled? ► somebody's extended family (=including not only parents and children, but also grandparents, aunts etc)· She gets a lot of help from her extended family. ► a large/small family· She came from a large family of seven children. ► a one-parent/single-parent family· One in seven families is a one-parent family. ► the nuclear family (=a family consisting of a mother, a father, and their children)· Not everyone lives in a typical nuclear family. ► close/close-knit family (=a family that spends a lot of time together and gives each other support)· Laura's family are very close. ► the Royal family (=the king or queen and their family)· The Royal Family have large estates in Scotland. ► the Smith/Jones/Brown etc family· The Smith family are living in temporary accommodation. family + NOUN► a family member/a member of the family· The event was attended by many of his family members, including his children and grandchildren. ► somebody's family background· He comes from a stable family background. ► a family history· Is there a family history of heart disease? ► family life· Some people believe that television is destroying family life. ► a family unit· the breakup of the traditional family unit ► somebody's family home (=where someone's family live and where they lived as a child)· Her family home is in a village outside Derry. ► a family business (=one run by members of a family)· My parents expected me to join the family business. ► a family car (=one designed for families with children)· It's a practical family car that is also fun to drive. ► a family holiday British English, a family vacation American English:· Most of our family holidays were spent in the south of France. ► a family resemblance (=when members of the same family look like each other)· There's a strong family resemblance between all the sisters. COMMON ERRORS ► Don't say 'my family is five', 'my family is five members/people', or 'my family is of five members/people'. Say there are five people in my family.COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES► aristocratic family an aristocratic family ► family background· Many kids lack a stable family background. ► the black sheep of the family Amy’s always been the black sheep of the family. ► family breakdown· A growing proportion of children are affected by family breakdown. ► the family/household budget· Often the husband and wife contribute equally to the family budget. ► a family business (=owned and controlled by one family)· For many years the hotel was a family business. ► a family celebration (=for family members)· Everyone’s coming here for a family celebration. ► a family Christmas· We always have a family Christmas at home. ► the family circle· It’s important for children to have friends outside the family circle. ► a family planning clinic (=giving advice about how to prevent pregnancy)· There are family planning clinics all over the country. ► family conflict· There are various techniques you can use to try and avoid family conflict. ► a student/family counsellor (=helping students or families with problems)· Student counsellors say there's a lot of pressure at college these days. ► school/family crest► a family doctor (=who treats all the members of a family)· We’ve had the same family doctor for fifteen years. ► a family dog (=that belongs to a family)· Labradors make a great family dog. ► family entertainment (=suitable for adults and children)· The holiday village has plenty of family entertainment on offer. ► the home/domestic/family environment· A lot of children suffer because of problems in their home environment. ► family/parental expectations (=expectations that families or parents have for their children)· Parental expectations for a first child tend to be quite high. ► family fare The movie is suitable family fare. ► a family firm· The business grew from a small family firm into a large company. ► a family friend· He’s visiting family friends. ► a family grave (=one where members of a family are buried together)· Walter died in 1922 and was buried in the family grave in Finchley cemetery. ► a family holiday· I first visited Orkney on a family holiday when I was a boy. ► the family home (=where a family lives)· The house was once the family home of the O'Dare family. ► family honour· Refusal of a marriage offer is seen as an attack on the family honour. ► an immigrant family· A quarter of the school’s students are from immigrant families. ► family/household income· She works in a shop to supplement the family income. ► family likeness I can see the family likeness. ► lone-parent family a lone-parent family ► loving wife/family/parents etc the confidence he had gained from having a warm and loving family ► family loyalty· Family loyalty prevented her from telling what she knew. ► a committee/staff/family etc member· Close friendships developed between crew members on the ship. ► noble family/blood/birth etc a member of an ancient noble family The Marquis would have to marry a woman of noble blood. ► a family/school etc outing a class outing to the ballet ► a family pet· These dogs make an ideal family pet. ► family problems· She would never discuss family problems with outsiders. ► a family quarrel· Your family quarrels are none of my concern. ► raise ... family It was time for Dean to settle down and raise a family. ► family relationships· Travelling a lot for business can strain family relationships. ► a family resemblance (=between members of the same family)· I couldn't detect any family resemblance. ► family reunion a family reunion ► a family row· When he turned up late, there was a family row. ► a family secret· Their normally strong relationship is threatened when he has to reveal a family secret. ► a family show (=one that is suitable for families and children to watch)· It’s a real family show, with something for everyone. ► family/blood ties· Family ties have been weakened by older people living apart from their children. ► family time· As the children get older, evenings become valuable family time. ► a family tradition· According to family tradition, he must sing at his own wedding. ► a family vacation· We had to cancel the family vacation. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE► black· They may explore with Joseph whether he can get in touch with the other black families.· Outsiders paid attention to slum conditions only when they burned and a black family died.· Fourth, the two researchers were white and so handicapped in their assessment of black families and children.· Some whites tried to help black families by aiding in guard duty.· Finally, certain vulnerable groups were most affected by these changes, notably black families living in inner city deprived areas.· In the mid 1960s, the average income for black families was only 54% of the average for white families.· Also, assailants fire-bombed the home of a black family in a white Philadelphia neighborhood. ► immediate· Instead she joined her immediate family for a service at the private chapel on the Althorp estate.· Cancer claimed the lives of her parents and hit 14 of 17 people in her immediate family.· She was not going out at all and was communicating very little with her immediate family.· She was respectfully requested to keep the fact he is on special assignment to herself and her immediate family.· In some cultures eye contact between men and women is strictly forbidden outside the immediate family.· Fidela Kirstein died in 1991; the couple had no children, and Kirstein left no other immediate family.· This impetus originated mainly from two previously noted sources: the user's immediate family and the police.· Indeed, I mentioned, the immediate family is quite distressed because nobody knows the language. ► large· She likes the atmosphere of a large family.· Parents of large families now get priority housing and school registration and subsidized child care services.· With high mortality rates even a large family size only just replaces the parents.· I focus, I wait for a large Oriental family to walk out of my range.· Why should those living alone or elderly couples be paying as high rates as large wage-earning families?· It was a large Victorian family kitchen, and looked so when it was empty or when only Mrs Beavis was there.· And there was the answer - a large family of ants had made its home there!· It is a small commercial music festival which helps to support a large free family entertainment programme. ► nuclear· The modern nuclear family is a vulnerable and fragile institution.· They are an extension of his nuclear family but also a discrete entity.· The individual with this ethic does not engage in any cooperative activity for goals beyond the immediate-interest of the nuclear family.· Second, the extended family counts for relatively less and the immediate nuclear family for relatively more.· For the first time in classical antiquity the nuclear family had assumed a central role in the politics of state.· Within this nuclear family, the hopes and affections of its members were concentrated and the emotional level could rise dangerously high.· The result of this dramatic change was the nuclear family.· First, individual households will not be restricted to nuclear families, i.e. parents and their children. ► poor· What actually happened was that a less doctrinaire magistracy put local taxes up in order to provide bread for poor families.· Less than one-third of children under six who lived in poor families lived in families that relied exclusively on welfare.· They also wished to achieve some redistribution of income in favour of families, particularly poor families.· And they come from some of the poorest families in the county.· The rural areas contained 34 percent of poor families and 19 percent of extremely poor families.· In poor families, the ability to work and to earn income is usually the only asset people have.· Consequently, the poorest families will have even less money.· As is to be expected, approximately 75 percent of the children come from poor families. ► royal· One of her main interests is our Royal family.· But the crown prince is 71 himself, and, having only half-brothers within the royal family, may have difficulty ruling.· And they devoted columns to discussing the possible effects of our exclusive pictures on the future of the royal family.· Teiresias, the prophet who had brought so many distressful prophecies to the royal family, came to bring still another.· Convicted murderers, especially brutal and disgusting ones, were followed around by as many paparazzi as the royal family.· But much of it also went into the unbridled and anachronistic opulence of the royal family and the main tribal chiefs.· One can only assume that the Roman officials exceeded their authority and treated the royal family with disrespect.· Walk backward, with your eyes on the royal family before you bow to them. ► whole· There was an invitation for the whole family.· The whole Poyser family goes off to bed by twilight.· The price-conscious monarch could have bought presents for the whole family - and still had change from £50.· She knew that it would raise too much suspicion for the whole family to leave at once.· Later, on 18 September 1762, the whole family went to Vienna.· We're not a whole family yet.· The whole emphasis on family care has developed building on a somewhat distorted view of past patterns of family life.· Though the whole family sang, he prospered during the piano lessons he received as a birthday present at age 6. ► young· But for some people, especially young healthy families, the cost would be higher.· Some years back, when he had a young family, Lewry joined his local National Trust centre.· The maker of hair-care and other personal-care products recently completed its first year under a younger generation of family managers.· Normally this financial support passes from older to younger generations in families in a one-way flow.· There are good swimming beaches each end of town with shallow sandy water, ideal for young families.· But for the time being, with a young family at home, he is very happy to have switched to contract catering.· Geoff is married, has a young family and has moved from his former home in West Yorkshire to Barmill. NOUN► business· In the Budget, we announced that we would take most family businesses out of Inheritance Tax altogether.· He joined the family business after his graduation in 1988.· Since then it has become a complete family business.· He was upset that I was abandoning the family business, but we worked it out.· The Court accepted that the two companies should really be regarded as a single family business.· It was family business, and family business is left with the family. ► doctor· The change affected clinics that primarily perform abortions as well as family doctors who may do the procedure along with unrelated services.· Your family doctor is always your first point of contact.· The Beans had never had a family doctor.· The family doctor was a name on a card rather than a face to be recognised in the street.· It means he may have murdered one patient for every month of his 24-year career as a family doctor.· The family doctor advised them to try a well-known rehabilitation unit, not realizing that it specialized in orthopaedic rather than neurological cases.· The crisis has been caused partly by the reluctance of self-employed family doctors to invest the considerable sums needed to computerise. ► home· Designs range from two-bedroom holiday bungalows to six-bedroom family homes.· It is going to be a family home.· Graeme, above, was last night at the family home in Edinburgh.· No evidence of a family home should remain.· Firstly, a widowed grandmother may be remembered as moving into the family home.· They only expect 12 around the dinner table these days at the family home at Stanton Harcourt. ► income· Under capitalism, housing costs 30 or 40 per-cent of family income.· We did not get family support or family income supplement or one-parent family income.· And Chapman University economists say median family income has risen well above $ 60, 000 a year.· The result is that family income has soared at the top and fallen at the bottom.· Two emotionally mature parents, moderate family income and stable home life are way ahead of age on the list.· It is also tough, hard working, loveable, helps earn the family income and we can't live without it.· Pessimism is especially high among baby boomers, with twice as many expecting family income to drop this year as last. ► life· They will have a totally different interpretation of family life and of the so-called moral nature of the matter.· While this finding is hardly conclusive, the effect of family life on school success obviously must be considered.· Are there a destructive set of values associated with family life in late twentieth-century Britain?· And when it comes to balancing work and family life, research consistently confirms the importance of workplace culture on individual behavior.· It seemed a veritable model of bohemian family life.· It was here they experienced a taste of what normal family life could really be like.· He is a stocky child who has no memory of family life.· We have mixed expectations in Britain about the responsibilities of family life and parenting. ► member· Above all, family members frequently blame themselves - and they may be encouraged to do so by the primary sufferers. iv.· These family members and friends need answers so they finally can say goodbye.· In this case different strains were found in the family members.· Individual feelings and complexities are repressed and there is a constant threat of mutiny among family members.· Current welfare policies are increasingly seeking to build upon responsibilities between family members.· Home-delivered medical services filled the gap between care by overworked family members and impossibly expensive care in hospitals.· The parenting that Mike and Jennifer designed works for all three family members.· Adult family members or professional assistants, accompanying the Laureate are welcome as Paying guests. ► name· Skoda's press officer is one Milan Smutny, whose family name means sad.· Says Peter Mayock: The surname Mayock is a unique and uncommon family name.· J stands for Johnstone, the family name behind a company which keeps six members of the family gainfully employed.· He loved his sons, and Alvin Sharpes loved his family name.· A hint of humanity and he was a disgrace to the family name.· He had told Wyatt that family names were irrelevant to him, and, besides, he had always liked birthdays.· Professor Hoskins has written that the 161 households recorded in the 1670 Wigston hearth tax return represent eighty-two different family names.· There is even disagreement as to whether this family name should be Gaterinidae or Plectorhynchidae. ► parent· Health and infant mortality 7 Children under five How many live with both parents or in a one parent family?· Priority for assistance will be given to senior citizens, disabled and single parent families.· And to what extent is the church ministering effectively to the needs of single parent families?· Consumer durables Lone parent families are less likely than two parent families to have household consumer durables.· In common with families in general, one parent families have been getting smaller.· Lone parents have much smaller proportions of household heads in the labour market than two parent families. ► planning· You can discuss with your doctor or family planning clinic which is most suitable for you.· Anyone, married or single, male or female, young or not-so-young can go to a family planning clinic.· The family planning boom Today there are more women using modern contraception than ever before.· I did make an appointment at the local family planning clinic.· I know now that you can get Durex free from family planning clinics, but not many people know that.· But then how many fellas will go into a family planning clinic?· Provincial and local authorities were ordered to double family planning funding.· Some family planning clinics will also arrange for you to be given a blood test. ► relationship· Certainly such support is not a routine feature of family relationships, even between parents and children.· She also looked to the basic relationships, usually 148 family relationships, that might provide strength to the patient.· Herskovitz created Thirtysomething and now knows exactly where the emotionally richest fault-lines of family relationships lie.· And I wondered how much strength she could have received from her family relationships.· They fear damaging the child within their secure family relationship.· Does equality have to mean sameness for spouses in order to have equal power and status in our most basic family relationships?· A sense of loss of mutually supportive family relationships.· The first section focuses on changing counterproductive patterns of communication between parents and children, thus strengthening family relationships. ► size· Dual graduate couples have the highest fertility of all, if family size up to four children only is considered.· The good news is that in many countries the definition of what constitutes ideal family size is already evolving downward.· The decline of infant mortality makes it easier to accept the idea of smaller family size.· Sam Ruang, who listens quietly, says decisions on matters like family size belong to Mariam.· Moreover, family size may be a function of capital or income.· Education also increases equality in the marriage relationship, giving women more control over decisions concerning family size.· A 200-gram tube of Colgate, the family size that is popular in cities, costs roughly that much. ► tree· Sir Walter Scott once said he was honoured to be a mere twig on the Swinton family tree.· Perhaps you can give me some help on the family tree.· Tracing your family tree Where do you start?· There also are successful family trees that grow both vertically and horizontally.· By the 1870s Darwinians were using diagrams showing hypothetical family trees to account for relationships among species.· Her family tree included a former prime minister and the governor of Tokyo.· But after the revolution, many family trees were destroyed or forgotten, especially in the cities.· But all they could do was draw a family tree and suggest early and aggressive screenings. ► unit· Housing mirrors the isolated and privatised nature of domestic labour and reinforces each self-contained family unit.· In the future the development of specialised products may well become more important on family units.· It is worth sounding a warning to those who are part of a tightly-knit family unit.· Substitute care was seen as supporting parents as well as providing for children's needs, and practical assistance as preserving the family unit.· The smaller family units can not cope with grandparents either in terms of money or space.· They were contributors to a family wage rather than independent earners, but they were not members of a family unit of production.· Construction and cultivation require cooperation within the family unit and within the community.· The farms were run as family units with an important role for the wife. ► value· They must contribute towards constructing genuine communities, family values generating City values.· Indeed, many people here made their money under Republican leadership and cite family values and school choice as their chief concerns.· This is not because Las Vegas has suddenly discovered family values.· In the 1994 bi-election year, prayer in the schools, so-called family values, and similar issues came to the forefront.· If he for ever growled songs about factories, family values and running wild on a minimum wage they would be happy.· Philandering erodes love and family values, but it does not necessarily destroy them.· And after voicing Republican-tinged themes of smaller government and family values, he is sitting pretty in the polls.· The major distortion of family values front an economic perspective is on the revenue side of the ledger. VERB► extend· Other changes concern transformations of family structure, usually so that extended families are more distant and so have less control.· The researchers concluded that the supportive atmosphere of the extended family had been sufficient to counterbalance the effects of the questionable diets.· Therapy will extend to families of victims who often suffer their own trauma because of the abuse.· Pretty and earthy, she can be aggressive or retreat believably, and has some nice scenes with her extended family.· Alstom is also extending the product family concept to infrastructure elements, introducing two ranges of signalling equipment.· Yet extending family is such a decisive factor in the success of working parents, they really can not afford their reluctance.· Overcrowding has weakened the cherished tradition of extended families living together. ► help· Social workers try to help individuals and families by offering support, advice and practical assistance.· Perhaps you can give me some help on the family tree.· The states would get grant to help these working families buy coverage.· A debt counsellor who's been helping the family says the lender has shown no compassion.· More constructive measures were also introduced to help families with children financially and medically.· At one of the seven outdoor and museum stops, professional paleontologists will help families dig for fossils. ► live· Instead we made them talk about where they lived and about their families.· Less than one-third of children under six who lived in poor families lived in families that relied exclusively on welfare.· Her parents were a stable influence and Beverley continued to live in the family home in the village of Corby Glenn.· In 1987, over one million children were living in families with an unemployed head.· Who are these breadwinners who, while employed, are none the less still living with their families in poverty?· More than a million and a half children - one in eight - live in these one-parent families.· Most live far from families and childhood friends. ► raise· The heaviest burden falls upon the housewives, whose task it is to raise their families in these circumstances.· They had married right after high school, and raised a large family on a meager budget.· Members who are temporarily retired to raise families are also entitled to this concession.· At times, he was saddened by never having married and raised a family of his own.· Perhaps Reuben and Miriam were secretly not happy with the prospect of raising a family in Cork.· Dole, raised in a Democratic family, registered as a Republican because the party dominated local politics.· Many left to marry and raise families.· You can walk down the street, raise your family, earn a living. PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY► in the family way Word family
WORD FAMILYnounfamiliarity ≠ unfamiliarityfamilyfamiliarizationadjectivefamiliar ≠ unfamiliarfamilialverbfamiliarizeadverbfamiliarly 1closely related group [countable] a group of people who are related to each other, especially a mother, a father, and their children: Do you know the family next door? The Webb family still has its farm over there. This house isn’t big enough for a family of seven.2all your relations [countable, uncountable] all the people you are related to, including those who are now dead: I’m moving to Detroit because I have some family there.in somebody’s family That painting has been in our family (=been owned by our family) for 200 years. Asthma runs in the family (=is common in the family).GRAMMAR: Singular or plural verb?• In senses 1 and 2, family is usually followed by a singular verb: · The family now lives in London.· My family comes from Scotland originally.• In British English, you can also use a plural verb: · The family now live in London.· My family come from Scotland originally.Grammar guide ‒ NOUNS3children [countable] children: Couples with young families wouldn’t want to live here. They’re getting married next year, and hope to start a family (=have children) straight away.bring up/raise a family the problems of bringing up a family on a very low income4 family size/pack etc a container or package containing a large amount of a product5group of animals/things [countable] technical a group of related animals, plants, languages etcthe cat/parrot/squirrel etc family The cat family includes lions and tigers. Spanish and Italian are part of the Romance language family.6she’s/he’s family informal used to emphasize your connection with someone who is related to you7 in the family way old-fashioned pregnantCOLLOCATIONS– Meanings 1 & 2adjectivesthe whole family· We invited the whole family round.all the family· This is a game which all the family can enjoy.somebody's immediate family (=closest relations)· What if one of your immediate family were disabled?somebody's extended family (=including not only parents and children, but also grandparents, aunts etc)· She gets a lot of help from her extended family.a large/small family· She came from a large family of seven children.a one-parent/single-parent family· One in seven families is a one-parent family.the nuclear family (=a family consisting of a mother, a father, and their children)· Not everyone lives in a typical nuclear family.close/close-knit family (=a family that spends a lot of time together and gives each other support)· Laura's family are very close.the Royal family (=the king or queen and their family)· The Royal Family have large estates in Scotland.the Smith/Jones/Brown etc family· The Smith family are living in temporary accommodation.family + NOUNa family member/a member of the family· The event was attended by many of his family members, including his children and grandchildren.somebody's family background· He comes from a stable family background.a family history· Is there a family history of heart disease?family life· Some people believe that television is destroying family life.a family unit· the breakup of the traditional family unitsomebody's family home (=where someone's family live and where they lived as a child)· Her family home is in a village outside Derry.a family business (=one run by members of a family)· My parents expected me to join the family business.a family car (=one designed for families with children)· It's a practical family car that is also fun to drive.a family holiday British English, a family vacation American English:· Most of our family holidays were spent in the south of France.a family resemblance (=when members of the same family look like each other)· There's a strong family resemblance between all the sisters.COMMON ERRORS ► Don't say 'my family is five', 'my family is five members/people', or 'my family is of five members/people'. Say there are five people in my family. |
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