网站首页  词典首页

请输入您要查询的词汇:

 

词汇 pacifier
释义

Definition of pacifier in English:

pacifier

noun ˈpasɪfʌɪəˈpæsəˌfaɪ(ə)r
  • 1A person or thing that pacifies someone or something.

    平定者;抚慰者;镇静剂,使人平静的东西

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Instead of the usual two hour mental pacifier, can a DVD serve higher purposes such as education, thought, and examination of the human condition?
    • This story is about the rise and the fall of the three unifier and pacifier of Japan towards the end of the 16th century after generations of feudal wars of powerful local rulers.
    • Once, when Beloved wakes, Denver has sweet bread that she gives to her, and at this point, sugar becomes a pacifier for Beloved, in the same way sweets soothe a child.
    • Oda Nobunaga, the leading warlord and the first of the three pacifiers and unifiers of Japan, was opposed to Buddhism.
    • They were my pacifier - my teddy on a stormy night.
    • But his old rival, Tokugawa Ieyasu, proved stronger and became the third and last pacifier of Japan and the first Shogun of the Tokugawa family.
    1. 1.1North American A rubber or plastic teat for a baby to suck on; a dummy.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Never tie any strings around your baby's neck, even to hold a pacifier.
      • Many parents don't like the idea of their babies using a pacifier or dummy but give them one anyway just to get some peace, believing that pacifiers are essentially harmless.
      • Family physicians argue about whether pacifiers are good or bad for infants.
      • Early and subsequent use of pacifiers, water, glucose water and formula supplementation have been shown to promote early weaning and nipple confusion.
      • Olivia can also sit up, roll over, giggle, shriek, hold her own bottle, and put her own pacifier in her mouth.
      • Thumb-sucking has a major advantage over a pacifier, in that when the child enters an episode of activity, playing or moving about, the thumb will invariably be removed from the mouth; a pacifier tends to remain in position.
      • Keep soft toys, rattles, or pacifiers on hand in case your baby gets fussy.
      • A man passed her, then a woman with a baby carriage, the baby inside waving a pacifier.
      • As they went to examine the young patient together, PO immediately noticed that the baby was drooling and fussing as the mother tried to comfort him with a pacifier.
      • The introduction of pacifiers and bottles is also a common practice within the nursery setting.
      • It is normal for children to suck their thumbs, their fingers or pacifiers.
      • Because of the interference that often happens in the hospitals (giving pacifiers and formula), many women get home with a newborn who has been imprinted to nurse incorrectly.
      • Sugar's siren call can even block out pain - pediatricians have shown that newborns who have injections or blood drawn don't mind the needle as much when also given a sugar-coated pacifier to suck.
      • The use of oral sucrose, with or without pacifiers, has been shown to relieve pain in neonates, as assessed by physiologic and behavioral pain indicators and pain scores.
      • Holding or rocking the baby and offering a pacifier might help.
      • It is best to avoid bottles and pacifiers until your baby is 4 to 6 weeks old and has learned how to breastfeed well.
      • If the parents-to-be have specified in the baby registry a brand or shape of bottles, nipples, and pacifiers, these items may be a safe choice for a baby shower gift.
      • Wash hands with soap and water particularly before eating and preparing food; before touching infants or their toys, bottles, or pacifiers; and after contact with animals or handling raw meat.
      • The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends babies use a pacifier at bed time.
      • The use of pacifiers, sugar water and formula bottle feeds, etc. may lead to nipple confusion and jeopardise the establishment of successful breast feeding.

Rhymes

classifier

Definition of pacifier in US English:

pacifier

nounˈpasəˌfī(ə)rˈpæsəˌfaɪ(ə)r
  • 1A person or thing that pacifies someone or something.

    平定者;抚慰者;镇静剂,使人平静的东西

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Instead of the usual two hour mental pacifier, can a DVD serve higher purposes such as education, thought, and examination of the human condition?
    • They were my pacifier - my teddy on a stormy night.
    • Once, when Beloved wakes, Denver has sweet bread that she gives to her, and at this point, sugar becomes a pacifier for Beloved, in the same way sweets soothe a child.
    • But his old rival, Tokugawa Ieyasu, proved stronger and became the third and last pacifier of Japan and the first Shogun of the Tokugawa family.
    • This story is about the rise and the fall of the three unifier and pacifier of Japan towards the end of the 16th century after generations of feudal wars of powerful local rulers.
    • Oda Nobunaga, the leading warlord and the first of the three pacifiers and unifiers of Japan, was opposed to Buddhism.
    1. 1.1North American A rubber or plastic nipple for a baby to suck on.
      British term dummy
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Early and subsequent use of pacifiers, water, glucose water and formula supplementation have been shown to promote early weaning and nipple confusion.
      • Olivia can also sit up, roll over, giggle, shriek, hold her own bottle, and put her own pacifier in her mouth.
      • The use of pacifiers, sugar water and formula bottle feeds, etc. may lead to nipple confusion and jeopardise the establishment of successful breast feeding.
      • It is normal for children to suck their thumbs, their fingers or pacifiers.
      • Wash hands with soap and water particularly before eating and preparing food; before touching infants or their toys, bottles, or pacifiers; and after contact with animals or handling raw meat.
      • The introduction of pacifiers and bottles is also a common practice within the nursery setting.
      • The use of oral sucrose, with or without pacifiers, has been shown to relieve pain in neonates, as assessed by physiologic and behavioral pain indicators and pain scores.
      • A man passed her, then a woman with a baby carriage, the baby inside waving a pacifier.
      • Sugar's siren call can even block out pain - pediatricians have shown that newborns who have injections or blood drawn don't mind the needle as much when also given a sugar-coated pacifier to suck.
      • Never tie any strings around your baby's neck, even to hold a pacifier.
      • If the parents-to-be have specified in the baby registry a brand or shape of bottles, nipples, and pacifiers, these items may be a safe choice for a baby shower gift.
      • Family physicians argue about whether pacifiers are good or bad for infants.
      • It is best to avoid bottles and pacifiers until your baby is 4 to 6 weeks old and has learned how to breastfeed well.
      • As they went to examine the young patient together, PO immediately noticed that the baby was drooling and fussing as the mother tried to comfort him with a pacifier.
      • Keep soft toys, rattles, or pacifiers on hand in case your baby gets fussy.
      • Because of the interference that often happens in the hospitals (giving pacifiers and formula), many women get home with a newborn who has been imprinted to nurse incorrectly.
      • Many parents don't like the idea of their babies using a pacifier or dummy but give them one anyway just to get some peace, believing that pacifiers are essentially harmless.
      • Thumb-sucking has a major advantage over a pacifier, in that when the child enters an episode of activity, playing or moving about, the thumb will invariably be removed from the mouth; a pacifier tends to remain in position.
      • Holding or rocking the baby and offering a pacifier might help.
      • The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends babies use a pacifier at bed time.
随便看

 

春雷网英语在线翻译词典收录了464360条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2000-2024 Sndmkt.com All Rights Reserved 更新时间:2024/12/28 16:35:18