Mainstream cigarette butt news, as media finds an audience watching a Mother breastfeeding
Minding their own business?
This gossip starts immediately over the fact that the mother is a smoker and nothing to do with any flap mishap.
Why don't they butt-out...
Food for thought; breast for a baby, cigarette for Mom.
Having both at the same time?
GINGERLY, some definition: http://www.gingersoftware.com/english-online/spelling-book/confusing-words/brake-break
'Teen Mom' under fire in breastfeeding flap
Jenelle Evans faces harsh criticism on Twitter for a behavior that
a doctor says may not be so bad. Benefits may outweigh downsides »
What about a "nook"? What do you call this in your neck of the woods? Pacifier, dummy ...
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Sep 24, 2008 - 55 posts - 52 authorsI've heard it called a binky before, and a nook. ... No clue how it's spelled but we say cho-nee - Some italian dialect term for a pacifier ...
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Available in: NOOK Book (eBook), Paperback, Hardcover, Audiobook. If 9/11 are ... Birth, by definition, is a passive act. ... No, give the tyke a pacifier not a medal.
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Available in: NOOK Book (eBook), Paperback, Hardcover. Learn why ... Klein also explains how well-meaning parents may inadvertently “shame” their toddler, thus sabotaging development. Parents .... Is it okay that he uses a pacifier at night
Dictionary.com
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Pacifier definition, a person or thing that pacifies. See more. ...
Includes a zoo and a pacifier pit where kids ceremoniously part with their sucking equipment
Includes a zoo and a pacifier pit where kids ceremoniously part with their sucking equipment
Indulgence - Page 75 - Google Books Result
- books.google.com/books?isbn=0595348831Andrew Burke - 2005 - Fiction... harder, Natasha watched both of her large, sweaty breasts flop up and down over and over again in rhythm with the rest of her wet, naked body. She watched
... -
BRAKE
Have a cigarette as a restraint used to slow or stop the mental chaos control...
BREAK
Break a lucky(strike) streak; break a glass ..
Brake
archaic past of break
1: a toothed instrument or machine for separating out the fiber of flax or hemp by breaking up the woody parts 2: a machine for bending, flanging, folding, and forming sheet metal
Baby breast feed or fed?
Grammarly Answers | Use of break and brake
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2. fed to death fed to the teeth fed up to the teeth fed to the back teeth fed up to the back teeth bored or annoyed
FEED
FEED
Full Definition of FEED
transitive verb
1 a: to give food to
b: to give as food
2a: to furnish something essential to the development, sustenance, maintenance, or operation of <reading feeds the mind>
b: to supply (material to be operated on) to a machine 3: to produce or provide food for
b (1): to supply (a signal) to an electronic circuit (2): to send (as by wire or satellite) to a transmitting station for broadcast 6: to supply (a fellow actor) with cues and situations that make a role more effective
7: to pass a ball or puck to (a teammate) especially for a shot at the goal
intransitive verb
1a: to consume food : eat
b: prey —used with on, upon, or off 2: to become nourished or satisfied or sustained as if by food
3a: to become channeled or directed
b: to move into a machine or opening in order to be used or processed
Examples of FEED
- He was too weak to feed himself.
- We feed the plants with a special fertilizer twice a week.
- We fed the horses with apples, oats, and hay.
- The children fed apples to the horses.
- These supplies could feed a small army for a week.
- He doesn't earn enough to feed a family of four.
- helping to feed and clothe poor children
- They used the wood to feed the fire.
- The streams feed the creek.
- The motor is fed by an electrical current.
Origin of FEED
Middle English feden, from Old English fēdan; akin to Old English fōda food — more at food
First Known Use: before 12th century
Related to FEED
- Antonyms
- hold (back), keep (back), reserve, retain, withhold
Rhymes with FEED
2feed
noun
: food for animals
: a large meal
: a large meal
: a part of a machine or system that sends material or electricity to other parts
Full Definition of FEED
1
2
a: food for livestock; specifically: a mixture or preparation for feeding livestock
b: the amount given at each feeding
3
a: material supplied (as to a furnace or machine)
b: a mechanism by which the action of feeding is effected
c: the motion or process of carrying forward the material to be operated upon (as in a machine)
d: the act or process of feeding a signal (as an audio or video transmission); also: the signal being fed
4
: the action of passing a ball or puck to a team member who is in position to score
Examples of FEED
- There's a jam in the paper feed.
- We had to cut off the main power feed.
- They're showing a live satellite feed of the event.
First Known Use of FEED : year 1576
feed
noun (Concise Encyclopedia)
Foodstuff grown or developed for livestock and poultry to maintain the health of the animals and to increase the quality of such end products as meat, milk, or eggs. Modern feeds are derived from crops grown specifically for research or from by-products of surplus crops or foods produced for human consumption. Feeds are categorized as either concentrates (high in digestibility of nutrients but low in fibre content) or roughages (high in fibre and comparatively low in digestive nutrients). Most diets consist of a combination of feeds.
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