Our choice of words always depends on context.
Dictionaries say that a toddler is a baby who is learning to walk. My nephew has already started walking. He's properly walking now. So he's not a toddler anymore. How can you say that he's a toddler?I'd probably say he's a toddler.
I don't understand what you're saying here. I said my nephew is one year and eight months old, i.e. he's twenty months old (12 months + 8 months).might say he's an eighteen-month-old (yes, I know he's only sixteen months old but so what?)
I don't understand what you mean here. He's my nephew - my sister's son.he's the kid/child of your aunt and uncle
I'm surprised by that definition. To me, the verb "toddle" means to walk unsteadily as a young child. There's a very specific gait that toddlers have when they can't yet walk confidently. I know very little about kids so I thought a child that age would still be toddling, especially since I thought he was sixteen months old. You live and learn!Dictionaries say that a toddler is a baby who is learning to walk. My nephew has already started walking. He's properly walking now. So he's not a toddler anymore. How can you say that he's a toddler?
And this is why I don't teach maths!I don't understand what you're saying here. I said my nephew is one year and eight months old, i.e. he's twenty months old (12 months + 8 months).
I'm obviously not reading clearly today. I read "cousin" instead of "nephew". Sorry for the confusion but the point remains. He's the son/kid/child of your sister.I don't understand what you mean here. He's my nephew - my sister's son.
Which dictionaries say that a toddler is a baby who is learning to walk?Dictionaries say that a toddler is a baby who is learning to walk.
For example, Cambridge Dictionary.Which dictionaries say that a toddler is a baby who is learning to walk?
The context is this:Someone might call him any of the three, depending on the situation. Our choice of words always depends on context.
Note my corrections above. Even if the general scenario is from real life, I don't for one second believe that either of them said exactly what you say they did. Are we really meant to believe that your sister said "I have one baby slash kid slash child"?Yesterday, my sister was was in a shopping mall, where a very close college friend of hers met her after a long time apart.BothMy sister and her friend spent some time together, chatted and had a meal.My sister'sThe friend asked my sister, "Have you got married?" My sister said no colon here "Yes, in 2019". Then she asked, "How many children/kids/babies you have?"
My sister said no colon here "I have one baby/kid/child. He's one year and eight months old".
My sister used the word "baby".Note my corrections above. Even if the general scenario is from real life, I don't for one second believe that either of them said exactly what you say they did. Are we really meant to believe that your sister said "I have one baby slash kid slash child"?
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