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单词 kid
释义

kid

noun
 
/kɪd/
/kɪd/
Idioms
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  1.  
    [countable] (informal) a child or young person
    • Do you have any kids?
    • How are the kids (= your children)?
    • A bunch of kids were hanging around outside.
    • a gang/group of kids
    • college/school kids
    • street kids who rely on their ingenuity to keep alive
    • You're acting like a little kid!
    • as a kid I remember reading with my grandmother as a young kid of 6.
    • I'm looking forward to getting home to the wife and kids.
    • Here are some fun ways to teach your kids about healthy eating.
    • The kids love playing outside in the mud.
    • The game is aimed at kids of all ages.
    Kid is much more common than child in informal and spoken North American English.
    Collocations ChildrenChildrenHaving a baby/​child
    • want a baby/​a child/​kids
    • start a family
    • conceive/​be expecting/​be going to have a baby/​child
    • miss your period
    • become/​get/​be/​find out that you are pregnant
    • have a baby/​a child/​kids/​a son/​a daughter/​twins/​a family
    • have a normal/​a difficult/​an unwanted pregnancy; an easy/​a difficult/​a home birth
    • be in/​go into/​induce labour (especially US English) labor
    • have/​suffer/​cause a miscarriage
    • give birth to a child/​baby/​daughter/​son/​twins
    Parenting
    • bring up/ (especially North American English) raise a child/​family
    • care for/ (especially British English) look after a baby/​child/​kid
    • change (British English) a nappy/(North American English) a diaper/​a baby
    • feed/​breastfeed/​bottle-feed a baby
    • be entitled to/​go on maternity/​paternity leave
    • go back/​return to work after maternity leave
    • need/​find/​get a babysitter/​good quality affordable childcare
    • balance/​combine work and childcare/​child-rearing/​family life
    • educate/​teach/​home-school a child/​kid
    • punish/​discipline/​spoil a child/​kid
    • adopt a baby/​child/​kid
    • offer a baby for/​put a baby up for adoption
    • (especially British English) foster a child/​kid
    • be placed with/​be raised by foster parents
    see also boomerang kid, whizz-kid
    Extra Examples
    • She's a bright kid.
    • He's only a kid. You can't expect him to understand what's going on.
    • I feel desperately sorry for the poor kid.
    • I've tried to bring my kids up to respect other people.
    • She was crying like a kid.
    • The older kids had lessons in the afternoon as well.
    • They had adopted three kids.
    • They're just a bunch of kids.
    • We both wanted to have kids.
    • a spoiled little rich kid
    Topics Life stagesa2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • little
    • young
    • big
    … of kids
    • bunch
    • couple
    • crowd
    verb + kid
    • have
    • want
    • adopt
    phrases
    • just a kid
    • only a kid
    • like a kid
    See full entry
  2. [countable] a young goatTopics Animalsc2
  3. [uncountable] soft leather made from the skin of a young goat
    • a pair of white kid gloves
  4. Word Originnoun Middle English (in sense (3)): from Old Norse kith, of Germanic origin; related to German Kitze.
Idioms
handle/treat, etc. somebody with kid gloves
  1. to deal with somebody in a very careful way so that you do not offend or upset them
    • Treat her with kid gloves—she's very sensitive.
kids’ stuff (British English)
(North American English kid stuff)
  1. something that is so easy to do or understand that it is thought to be not very serious or only suitable for children
    • That was kids' stuff compared with what lies ahead.
    • The movie is pure kids' stuff from beginning to end.
a/the new kid on the block
  1. (informal) a person who is new to a place, an organization, etc.
    • Despite his six years in politics, he was still regarded by many as the new kid on the block.

kid

verb
/kɪd/
/kɪd/
(informal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they kid
/kɪd/
/kɪd/
he / she / it kids
/kɪdz/
/kɪdz/
past simple kidded
/ˈkɪdɪd/
/ˈkɪdɪd/
past participle kidded
/ˈkɪdɪd/
/ˈkɪdɪd/
-ing form kidding
/ˈkɪdɪŋ/
/ˈkɪdɪŋ/
Idioms Phrasal Verbs
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  1. [intransitive, transitive] (usually used in the progressive tenses) to tell somebody something that is not true, especially as a joke synonym joke
    • I thought he was kidding when he said he was going out with a rock star.
    • I didn't mean it. I was only kidding.
    • kid somebody I'm not kidding you. It does work.
    Extra Examples
    • Don't look so worried—I was just kidding.
    • Oh come on, who are you trying to kid?.
    Topics Personal qualitiesc2
  2. [transitive] to allow somebody/yourself to believe something that is not true synonym deceive
    • kid somebody/yourself They're kidding themselves if they think it's going to be easy.
    • kid somebody/yourself (that)… I tried to kid myself (that) everything was normal.
    More Like This Consonant-doubling verbsConsonant-doubling verbs
    • bob
    • club
    • dub
    • grab
    • rub
    • sob
    • throb
    • kid
    • nod
    • pad
    • plod
    • prod
    • shred
    • skid
    • thud
    • beg
    • blog
    • bug
    • drag
    • drug
    • flag
    • hug
    • jog
    • log
    • mug
    • nag
    • plug
    • bar
    • confer
    • infer
    • occur
    • prefer
    • refer
    • star
    • stir
    • transfer
    • acquit
    • admit
    • allot
    • chat
    • clot
    • commit
    • jut
    • knit
    • pat
    • regret
    • rot
    • spot
    • submit
    • appal
    • cancel
    • channel
    • control
    • counsel
    • enrol
    • equal
    • excel
    • fuel
    • fulfil
    • label
    • level
    • marvel
    • model
    • pedal
    • quarrel
    • signal
    • travel
  3. Word Originverb early 19th cent.: perhaps from kid (noun), expressing the notion “make a child or goat of”.
Idioms
no kidding (informal)
  1. used to emphasize that something is true or that you agree with something that somebody has just said
    • ‘It's cold!’ ‘No kidding!’
    Topics Opinion and argumentc1
  2. used to show that you mean what you are saying
    • I want the money back tomorrow. No kidding.
you’re kidding | you must be kidding
  1. (informal) used to show that you are very surprised at something that somebody has just said
    • She fired you? You're kidding! Why?

kid

adjective
/kɪd/
/kɪd/
(informal, especially North American English)
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  1. kid sister/brother a person’s younger sister/brotherTopics Family and relationshipsc1
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更新时间:2025/1/27 20:40:17