Similar words: teen, fifteen, teenage, teenager, teem, keen, queen, steep. Meaning: [tɪːnz] n. 1. the time of life between the ages of 12 and 20 2. all the numbers that end in -teen.
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181. O'Keeffe said that while parents need to have open discussions with their children and teens about their online media use, parents probably don't need to be "hypervigilant" about computer use.
182. In his teens, Mr.Zhang was a Red Guard in Chongqing, he said, but did not see any fighting because his parents made him stay at home.
183. With drug-addicted parents, Liz Murray (see photo,(www.Sentencedict.com) center) and her elder sister were homeless and starving as teens. They lived on the streets and once shared a tube of toothpaste as their "dinner".
184. Younger teens then yank the rocks up with a pulley.
185. With an extreme form of social anxiety called selective mutism , some kids and teens may be too anxious to talk at all in certain situations.
186. Sixty-three of the teens had brain scans while they took the tests.
187. WebWatcher cites data from the Pew Research Center that states some 75% of those aged 12-17 now own cell phones, and half of teens send over 50 messages per day.
188. In my teens I loved writers like Dostoyevsky, Kafka and Balzac, but I never imagined I could write anything that would measure up to the works they left us.
189. The original Latter-day Saint, Joseph Smith, acquired at least twenty-eight and perhaps sixty wives, some of them in their early teens, before he was lynched, in 1844, at age thirty-eight.
190. I remember watching Heigl in My Father, the Hero, with Gerard Depardieu, when I was in my early teens.
191. He was allowed neither to dress himself nor to cut his own food; and into his teens, milking what remained of his marketability as a prodigy, she forced him to wear short pants and long hair.
192. On the other hand, 70 percent of teens still want to be rich in the future; 29 percent want to be famous.
193. This adaptive-adolescence view, however accurate, can be tricky to come to terms with—the more so for parents dealing with teens in their most trying, contrary, or flat-out scary moments.
194. The increases were largest among black teens, whose birth rate climbed 5 percent in 2006 from the prior year.
195. These teens attributed their lack of condom use to a reduction in sexual pleasure when using the contraceptive and a concern that their sexual partner would not want to use a condom.
196. "Long before they reached their teens they were earning their keep" (J. M. Barrie).
197. Debbie Pickford of Allstate Insurance says teens are especially at risk from distracted driving and not just because they lack experience on the roads.
198. "Teens definitely have much greater awareness of what's going on around them now than they did eight years ago, " says Klinefelter.
199. He charges $ 220 day for adults, $ 175 for teens, and $ 110 for kids under 6.
200. Teens and adults who drop out of school or leave work are artlessly accurate by their parents.
201. A cross country and track athlete, Cassey encourages teens looking for an outlet to seek activities such as sports teams as a means of finding acceptance.
202. DEBBIE PICKFORD: "What we know from research on teen brain development, is that teens don't really have fully developed brains until they're twenty-five years old."
203. Frustrated by rising gas prices, two high school teens got fed up and decided to saddle up.
204. Therefore come Valentine Day, teens and oldies must swear by the name of holy Ave Maria that they will continue showing deep love and affection towards one another.
205. Debbie Pickford of Allstate Insurancesaidsays teens are especially at risk from distracted driving and not just because they lack experience on the roads.
206. Two days before meeting the U.S. teens, as FORBES ASIA trails the hyperkinetic Chan around Hong Kong, he bounds up several flights of an old apartment building, bursting into a room of photographers.
207. The auction of the card got over last week only. The T206 baseball card features Wagner in his teens clad in Pittsburgh Pirates uniform.
208. This was ture true even in teams teens with no family history of drug defendersdependence.
209. Abigail Baird, a Vassar psychologist who studies teens, calls this neural gawkiness—an equivalent to the physical awkwardness teens sometimes display while mastering their growing bodies.
210. One of those literary, award-winning adult novels that I secretly think was written for teens all along (see To Kill A Mockingbird).
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