Filiation vs Children - What's the difference?
filiation | children |
(uncountable) The condition of being a child of a specified parent
(countable) The ancestry or lineage shared by a group having the same bloodline
(countable, legal) The determination of paternity
.
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham), title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=7 * {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-14, author=(Jonathan Freedland)
, volume=189, issue=1, page=18, magazine=(The Guardian Weekly)
, title=
As nouns the difference between filiation and children
is that filiation is (uncountable) the condition of being a child of a specified parent while children is .filiation
English
Noun
children
English
Alternative forms
* (l) (archaic)Noun
(head)citation, passage=‘Children crawled over each other like little grey worms in the gutters,’ he said. ‘The only red things about them were their buttocks and they were raw. Their faces looked as if snails had slimed on them and their mothers were like great sick beasts whose byres had never been cleared. […]’}}
Obama's once hip brand is now tainted, passage=Now we are liberal with our innermost secrets, spraying them into the public ether with a generosity our forebears could not have imagined. Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don't know and will never meet.}}