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  1. Only showing results from www.dictionary.com

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  2. sibkid: a shortening of sibling's kid; Gender-neutral and gender-inclusive terminology for aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews is relatively new and continues to evolve. If none of the terms mentioned here suit you (or your relative), there is always an option to create your own, just like we do with other kinship terms.
  3. As an allusion to the movie, You're killing me, Smalls can signify a range of emotions, though it's often used to express a forgiving, humorous sense of frustration. It can be used as knowing exasperation, for example, with flight delays. Here, You're killing me, Smalls can convey an acknowledgement that air travel has its inconveniences, but that the delays are proving too much.
  4. Kid. A kid is a baby goat or antelope, though the word may also refer to leather made from goat hide. You might recognize the phrase, to handle with kid gloves meaning "to handle with care." The first recorded usage of kid as slang for "child" was in 1599, and the verb form to kid (meaning "to joke") entered the vernacular in 1839.
  5. The origin of this nursery rhyme. Versions of the rhyme have existed since before 1820. But, some folklorists propose it goes back much further, suggesting that counting-out rhymes like Eenie, Meenie, Miney, Moe originate from Ancient Celtic rituals of sorting out who would be chosen to die as a punishment or, perhaps, a sacrifice. In this theory, the words Eenie, meenie, miney, moe are ...
  6. By Ashley Austrew. Literacy is a different ball game for middle school students than it is for kids in elementary school. While sixth, seventh, and eighth graders are still learning new words, working on spelling, and improving their reading skills, they're also starting to engage with words in new ways.
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