Parent vs Parentless - What's the difference?
parent | parentless |
One of the two persons from whom one is immediately biologically descended; a mother or father.
* c. 1595 , (William Shakespeare), The Tempest , First Folio 1623, I.2:
*
* 2005 , Siobhan O'Neill, The Guardian , 24 Aug 2005:
A person who acts as a parent in rearing a child; a step-parent or adoptive parent.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-07, author=(Joseph Stiglitz)
, volume=188, issue=26, page=19, magazine=(The Guardian Weekly)
, title= (obsolete) A relative.
The source or origin of something.
* 1785 , (Thomas Jefferson), Notes on the State of Virginia :
(biology) An organism from which a plant or animal is immediately biologically descended.
(label) Sponsor, supporter, owner, protector.
*{{quote-book, year=1944, author=(w)
, title= # A parent company.
#* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-22, volume=407, issue=8841, page=68, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (computing) The object from which a child or derived object is descended; a node superior to another node.
To act as parent, to raise or rear.
Having no (living) parent.
* 1973 , Michael Gordon, The American Family in Social-Historical Perspective
* 2004 , Michael Kay, XSLT 2.0 Programmer's Reference
(computing) Having no parent in a data structure.
* 2012 , Michael Lawrence, ?John Verzani, Programming Graphical User Interfaces in R (page 19)
In computing|lang=en terms the difference between parent and parentless
is that parent is (computing) the object from which a child or derived object is descended; a node superior to another node while parentless is (computing) having no parent in a data structure.As a noun parent
is one of the two persons from whom one is immediately biologically descended; a mother or father.As a verb parent
is to act as parent, to raise or rear.As an adjective parentless is
having no (living) parent.parent
English
(wikipedia parent)Noun
(en noun)- My twin sister says she loves our parents , but honestly, I dislike them .
- 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.
- And they asked them, saying, Is this your son, who ye say was born blind? how then doth he now see? His parents answered them and said, We know that this is our son, and that he was born blind [...].
- The NHS is naturally pro-immunisation, reassuring parents that their babies can easily cope with these jabs.
Globalisation is about taxes too, passage=It is time the international community faced the reality: we have an unmanageable, unfair, distortionary global tax regime. […] It is the starving of the public sector which has been pivotal in America no longer being the land of opportunity – with a child's life prospects more dependent on the income and education of its parents than in other advanced countries.}}
- Misery is often the parent of the most affecting touches in poetry.
The Three Corpse Trick, section=chapter 5 , passage=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.}}
T time, passage=The ability to shift profits to low-tax countries by locating intellectual property in them
Synonyms
* (person from whom one is descended) progenitor * motherAntonyms
* (person from whom one is descended) child, offspring * childHyponyms
* (person from whom one is descended) father, motherDerived terms
* parentage * parental * parentdom * parenthood * parentish * parentless * parentlike * parently * parentness * parentship * parent companyVerb
Derived terms
* parentingReferences
See also
* fosterAnagrams
* 1000 English basic words ----parentless
English
Adjective
(-)- Firstly, then, who were these parentless children who seem to have been present in a sizeable proportion of households...
- Two consequences of parentless elements complicate the rules.
- The top-level window is parentless and forms the root of the hierarchy.