parent
noun
- father or mother
verb
- act like a parent (rear a child), being a parent to; rearing
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈpɛəɹənt/ / /ˈpɛːɹənt/ / /ˈpæɹənt/
name
- A surname.
noun
Etymology: From Middle English parent, borrowed from Anglo-Norman parent, Middle French parent, from Latin parentem, accusative of parēns (“parent”), present participle of pariō (“to breed, bring forth”).
- A person who raises a child (which they have made, adopted, fostered, taken as their own, etc.).
“After both her parents were killed in a forest fire, Sonia was adopted by her aunt and uncle.”
“my trust / Like a good parent, did beget of him / A falsehood in it's contrarie, as great / As my trust was, which had indeede no limit, / A confidence sans bound.”
- A person who has had a baby; this person in relation to their child or children.
- A surrogate parent.
- A third person who has provided DNA samples in an IVF procedure in order to alter faulty genetic material.
- A relative.
- The source or origin of something.
“Misery is often the parent of the most affecting touches in poetry.”
“Indolence and unalimentary food are the parents of this disease; but to neither are Indians accustomed.”
- An organism from which a plant or animal is immediately biologically descended.
- Sponsor, supporter, owner, protector.
“The dinghy was trailing astern at the end of its painter, and Merrion looked at it as he passed. He saw that it was a battered-looking affair of the prahm type, with a blunt snout, and like the parent ship, had recently been painted a vivid green.”
- Sponsor, supporter, owner, protector.
“The ability to shift profits to low-tax countries by locating intellectual property in them[…]is often assumed to be the preserve of high-tech companies.[…]current tax rules make it easy for all sorts of firms to generate[…]“stateless income”: profit subject to tax in a jurisdiction that is neither the location of the factors of production that generate the income nor where the parent firm is domiciled.”
- The object from which a child or derived object is descended; a node superior to another node.
- The nuclide that decays into a daughter nuclide.
verb
Etymology: From Middle English parent, borrowed from Anglo-Norman parent, Middle French parent, from Latin parentem, accusative of parēns (“parent”), present participle of pariō (“to breed, bring forth”).
- To act as parent, to raise or rear.
“However, even with money and caregivers, the child is left without a parent and most likely without a plan for their emotional, psychological, and spiritual well-being. A time will come when you will no longer be able to parent your child, period.”
- To provide a parent object for one or more other objects, which become the children.