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词汇 example_english_orphan
释义

Examples of orphan


These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
I think we as theatre artists have been orphaned from our spiritual lineage.
More positively, many older people have important household tasks, especially in the care of grandchildren and orphans.
Additionally, of particular interest are the genes called orphans which have no homologues in distantly related species.
Most were focused on ethical issues of concern to community, family, clan, spouse, parents, children, neighbors, orphans, and cobelievers.
The orphans had to be healthy and without bodily defects.
Widows, (girl) orphans, new daughters-in-law, and unwanted wives are amongst those who could traditionally expect the lowest levels of consideration within the joint family system.
The effects on the life courses of children who were orphaned during the first epidemic period could be twofold.
The solution was most probably sought in increasing the pace of discharge of older orphans into the community.
The orphans were also trained for their future employment, and - since they were well-disciplined - were favoured workers.
In 1859 86 orphans were registered, whereas in 1899 approximately 50 were cared for.
Democracy in effect ' orphaned ' this emerging but structurally weak and territorially dispersed actor.
Since their parents are deceased or could not be found, orphans and abandoned children depend on the state.
Thousands of orphans and abandoned children have grown up in foster families in these ordinary rural villages.
There were few, if any, attempts to draw a distinction between orphaned children and children who live with only one parent for other reasons.
True, orphans were dependents, but could they not become useful, independent members of society after childhood?
Like all orphans, she longed for the love of a parent, though she was forced to make due with shallower and less stable human connections.
The state monopolises welfare provision to orphans and abandoned children found in urban areas, where it emphasises institutional care.
Where workhouses were introduced, they were regulated under humane sets of rules, and largely catered for orphaned and homeless people.
An orphaned youngster might benefit if it did not discriminate among lactating females in its nursing behavior.
Almshouses aided the poor, orphans, elderly, and mentally ill and provided these groups medical care as well.
Five children entered the institution more than one year after they were orphaned.
One in every ten orphans died in the orphanage, a level of mortality about average for this age group.
When the morpheme in question elides, the orphaned high or rising tone is realised on the preceding syllable.
The main function of the home has changed from providing free caring services to orphans to providing broader services to patients in society.
In consequence, the number of orphans increased greatly.
The orphans were somewhere at the bottom of the heap.
The activities exposed the orphans to theatre and circus for the very first time, because they had never had the opportunity to attend such performances.
According to current policy, only orphans and abandoned children (found in urban areas) are taken into the care of the state.
However, for orphans and abandoned children, this principle had to be altered.
The number of minor children within a family who became orphans is reconstructed from information from the custody acts, population registers and orphanage records.
When orphans are with a group and it is time to eat, the orphans will be sent to the river to fetch water.
Many of the orphans in this cohort had furthermore lost both parents within a short space of time.
The majority of the children were over 15 when they were orphaned.
The orphanage, however, only admitted girls aged 6-10, and admission was not restricted to full orphans.
The institutional population - the orphans - is usually treated as a group.
The approach was longitudinal ; the orphans were followed in the registers until they reached adulthood (at age 23 or by marrying) or died.
The orphans had to be not older than 16, and a guardian or coguardian had to be appointed.
Almost half of the orphans stayed in one of the orphanages for a certain time before they reached adulthood.
Not all the children who were admitted to one of the orphanages were indeed full orphans.
The history of the formal institutions which were established to take care of (full) orphans is much better documented.
Before the nineteenth century inmates were almost invariably old or ill or widows with orphans.
Over time, it could have provided the rudiments for a separate orphans pension.
In early 1980, the central government required the institution to institutionalise orphans and abandoned children instead of placing them in foster families.
In some foster families, three generations of women have fostered orphans and abandoned children.
The focus of this research is on institutional care for old, disabled people and orphans in a period of social-economic transition and rapid development.
The provincial government had to establish 84 new orphanages to take in up to 15,149 orphans.
The following cases show how these policies are changing the financial base of institutional care for orphans from a state-dominant to a mixed system.
All of the orphans were taken care of.
Special health insurance arrangements (mainly lower copayments) apply to widows, pensioners, disabled people, and orphans (6).
Because there are not many orphans in urban society, child abandonment is the single most significant cause of children being taken into the care of the state.
During the second period, the number of orphans and abandoned children declined three or four years after the government introduced a new policy of family planning.
A few individuals joined the group because they were concerned about the welfare of the ten orphans who studied with the other students and lived at the school.
Children who became orphans during the cholera epidemic in 1866-1867 were significantly more at risk of admission to an orphanage than children who were orphaned in other years.
In 1851, in order to economize, the age at which the orphans had to leave the institute was lowered from 23 to 21 for boys, and to 20 for girls.
The battles, migrations and epidemics of this period obliged the government to set up homes to care for hundreds of thousands of abandoned and orphaned children.
Colloquially, she explains that orphans on the streets are called "children of sin" or "children of adultery" (p. 170) and elucidates how this stigma plays out in society.
Each new family formed by marriage, then, bears the mark of a woman's first, with the sisterly solidarity between orphans requiring a husband to embrace the second sister.
Imprisoned fathers and the orphans of justice.
The maintenance or development of children's welfare homes relied entirely on government appropriation, which was largely dependent on financial or political considerations of the nation, not the interests of orphans.
Apart from providing services to about 100 older and disabled people, it was the legal guardian to 552 orphans and abandoned children, 536 of whom were disabled.
Widows and female orphans might attend schools, often mission schools, to enable them to earn a living, so school textbooks might have had a wider reach through that channel.
In order to examine the consequences of orphanhood, we employ a longitudinal approach by observing the ' destiny ' of orphans in the years following the death of the last surviving parent.
They consisted of refugees, orphans, invalids, politically persecuted individuals, members of ethnic and religious minorities, unemployed men and people who had lost everything in the war.
If the man in the house dies, the adult woman is elevated to the status as the head of household, while the orphaned child remains in the shadow.
Suspending the provider's benefit and creating a new pension for orphans however implied that one group of children lost their protection: the children whose paternity was not established.
In the past, the government made employment arrangements for orphans and abandoned children when they grew up, so their lack of education did not influence their employment.
Thus, the orphan's deficiencies started with his parents (only socially inadequate parents were capable of abandoning their children), and were definitively indicated by his carelessness in losing the latter.
On account of the absence of poor law records she is unable to discuss the paupers, made up especially of the elderly and in®rm and orphans.
Are we to have higher and higher fees, more and more officers' children and fewer and fewer ratings' sons and ratings' orphans?
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
His widow and orphans are, of course, entitled to the usual pensions, etc.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
The disaster also left widows and orphans, and no financial compensation will replace the loss of their husbands and fathers.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
In other words, trustee savings banks have no power at present to look after widows and orphans of their employees.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
As a result, there are many pensioners and contributors, who feel that their widows' and orphans' pensions are not secure.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
I will confine myself to a section of beneficiaries: the overseas officers, their widows and orphans.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
Secondly, the boot is on the other foot when it comes to talking about widows and orphans.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
Among these refugees there is an undue proportion of old people, orphaned children and invalids.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
Today, working-class folk are contributing to a comprehensive security scheme which is providing for sickness, industrial injuries, for widows and orphans, and for old age.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
I submit that these girls ought not to be segregated as orphans.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
A soldier's widow and his orphans have, in fact, no part of their pension protected by law at present.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
We used to be told that all railway shareholders were widows and orphans—or so it seemed.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
There are other cases, those of the old pensioners and of the widows and orphans.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
Obviously this meant that orphans should have first consideration.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
At this point, foundlings were associated with orphans.
The poor no longer included only the traditional groups (widows, orphans, the blind, the lame) but also comprised newer kinds as well.
The surprising fact that only 53 per cent of the orphans could be identified in the court archives has already been discussed.
The final orphanage sample included 234 orphaned children from 124 different parental couples.
Many orphans had already left the parental home before the death of the last biological parent (8 per cent at least).
In 1814 the total number of orphans was 88, in 1859 approximately 80.
On this occasion, three daughters were orphaned, so the family property was granted to a couple with two male children.
However, with the current denotation, embryos are treated as "orphans," an analogy that leads to paradoxes.
Our widows and orphans cry in their homes; our old fathers cry along the road.
Care was taken of all of the orphans.
Within this tradition, adoption and fostering used to be the two main ways of providing alternative care to orphans and abandoned children.
At that time living conditions and staff numbers in this institution did not allow the institutionalisation of many orphans and abandoned children.
The orphanage employed only one director and one nurse to look after newly found orphans and abandoned children.
In their place there would be schools for their children, hospitals for their sick, homes for their orphans, and societies, libraries and institutions for themselves.
The group of the youngest orphans manifested the biggest deprivation of personal love.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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