Crossword clues for kids
kids
- They say the darndest things
- Nicktoons target audience
- Minivan passengers
- Jokes with
- Jests with
- "__ these days ..."
- 'Bye Bye Birdie' song
- What Trix are for
- They're raised
- They're alright, to The Who
- Swallowers of Flintstones
- Sundance and Cisco
- Nickelodeon's target audience
- Nickelodeon viewers, by and large
- Nannies watch over them
- Most trick-or-treaters
- Kindergarten students
- Kindergarten attendees
- Junior players
- Jokes around with
- Johnny Depp's band, with "The"
- Is just joking
- Gently teases
- Fort that houses bouillon
- First-graders, e.g
- Evinces impertinence
- Early Chloe Sevigny movie
- Disney Channel target audience
- Dink's lack
- Bleating babies
- Billy and Sundance
- Bed bouncers, often
- Bart and Lisa Simpson, e.g
- Babies grow into them
- Au pair's charges
- "The __ Are All Right": 2010 Oscar nominee
- "Bye Bye Birdie" number
- "--- are people too!"
- "___ these days!"
- Linkletter subjects
- Toddlers
- Juveniles
- Tykes
- Youngsters
- Joshes
- Baby goats
- Grade-schoolers
- Rug rats
- Farm young
- With 70- and 71-Across, what the middle of this puzzle is
- See 59-Down
- Isn't serious
- Swing-set set
- One of the blanks in the cereal slogan "___ are for ___"
- Young goats
- Much-discussed 1995 movie
- Ribs
- Small fry
- Chocolate and Gavilan
- Teases
- Jokes with, ... around
- Slide, first to last, for children
- Butters ribs
- Teases children
- Puts on
- Young ones
- Pokes fun at
- Department store section
- Young people
- Young 'uns
- Young children
- Part of DINK
- Goats' progeny
- Gives a hard time
- "Bye Bye Birdie" song
- Boys and girls
- DINK part
Wiktionary
Wikipedia
Kids is a 1995 American teen drama film written by Harmony Korine and directed by Larry Clark. It stars Chloë Sevigny, Leo Fitzpatrick, Justin Pierce, Rosario Dawson, and Jon Abrahams, all in their film debuts. Kids is centered on a day in the life of a group of sexually active teenagers in New York City and their hedonistic behavior towards sex and substance abuse ( alcohol and other street drugs) during the height of the AIDS epidemic in the mid-1990s. The film generated a massive controversy upon its release in 1995, and caused much public debate over its artistic merit, even receiving an NC-17 rating from the MPAA. It was later released without a rating.
"Kids" is a duet by Kylie Minogue and Robbie Williams, released as the second single from Sing When You're Winning, Williams' fourth studio album and the third single from Light Years, Minogue's seventh studio album. Williams and then songwriting partner Guy Chambers co-wrote the song for Minogue.
Williams liked the song enough to turn it into a duet. The track was written when Minogue approached Williams to write her some songs for what would be her first album under Parlophone, Light Years. It was then that Williams felt the chemistry and decided to include the track on his album and release it as a single. It was an instant hit when it was released in 2000. It was also released on Grand Theft Auto V on a fictional radio station.
Kids was a children's magazine (unrelated to the later Kids magazine of the 2000s) published in Cambridge, Massachusetts and later New York City from 1970 to 1975. Its aim was to create a magazine which was, as much as possible, created and edited by children themselves, with minimal adult supervision.
Its founding editors were Jenette Kahn and Jim Robinson, who were adults. However, later in its history, it had a teenager, Denise Yuspeh (age 15), as its managing editor. Originally, Kids was published in standard magazine size, but issues near the end of its run used a smaller page size.
Kids accepted contributions of stories, poems, essays, puzzles, artwork, cartoons and photography from children aged 5 through 15, and held frequent contests for the most creative photographs, signs, buttons, etc. Monthly newspaper-like features included "Don't You Hate..." (modeled on a MAD Magazine feature of that title), Horace Cope's Horror-Scope, the Swap Shop, Letters to the Editor, and a " Dear Abby" style advice column called "Dear Dr. Loker," which was initiated by students at Loker Elementary School in Wayland, Massachusetts. The magazine also conducted interviews with children around the nation on such topics as pets, parents, who decides on bedtimes, what it was like to be twins, etc.
Unlike most children's magazines, Kids paid its contributors — $5 or $6 plus three free copies of the issue in which their work appeared — and returned rejected contributions if a self-addressed, stamped envelope was provided.
The magazine's illustrators included twelve-year-old Ray Billingsley, who went on to create the syndicated newspaper comic Curtis, and fourteen-year-old Tom Gammill, who later wrote for Saturday Night Live, Seinfeld, The Critic, The Wonder Years, and It's Garry Shandling's Show with Max Pross.
Kahn was later involved in Scholastic Press's Dynamite! magazine, which had some similarities in format and content, although it was produced by an adult staff. Eventually she became president and editor-in-chief of DC Comics and MAD Magazine.
Category:American children's magazines Category:Defunct magazines of the United States Category:Magazines established in 1970 Category:Magazines disestablished in 1975 Category:Magazines published in Massachusetts Category:Magazines published in New York City
KIDS is a UK-based charity which provides a range of services for disabled children, young people and their families. The Kids ethos is to work in partnership with parents and carers to enable disabled children and young people to develop their skills and abilities and to fulfill their potential, irrespective of their particular impairment or condition.
"The Kids" is the lead single taken from British funk/acid jazz band Jamiroquai's second studio album, The Return of the Space Cowboy, though it was recorded shortly after the Emergency on Planet Earth sessions. The single was only released in Japan, on 30 June 1994. "The Kids" is a song that deals with the rights of children and their social status in the world. The song is written to be absurdly loud and high in tempo, to possibly represent the immaturity of children, and more generally the whole early childhood of a person, which is usually a carefree time of life.
Kids is a song by Swedish DJ Style of Eye, featuring Soso and an uncredited appearance from Elliphant. Released on December 10, 2013 worldwide (excluding the United Kingdom), it was his fourth and final single of 2013. In the United Kingdom, it was released on March 16, 2014.
"Kids" peaked at 33 in Sweden and 76 in Germany.
"Kids" is a song recorded by American pop rock band OneRepublic as the second single off their upcoming fourth studio album scheduled to be released early this fall. The single's title and artwork were officially announced on the band's Twitter account on August 3, 2016.
Kids: Fun Stuff To Do Together was a children's magazine published in the mid-2000s (unrelated to the earlier Kids magazine of the 1970s). Kids, which was originally launched in 2001 as Martha Stewart Kids, specialized in projects that children could make, either by themselves or along with their parents. It was published quarterly by Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia. Kids was also a winner of the prestigious 2005 and 2006 National Magazine Award for Design, and in 2005 for Photography by the American Society of Magazine Editors.
On March 1, 2006, the publishers of Kids announced that the company decided to discontinue the full-sized quarterly magazine with the Spring 2006 issue in favor for a new digest sized publication, Good Things for Kids, which will be published biannually and carries no advertising. Current readers were given the option to subscribe to Everyday Food for the remainder of their subscription.
"Kids" is the third single from MGMT's album Oracular Spectacular. It was released as a single on October 13, 2008. The song was the center of a legal dispute with the former President of France, Nicolas Sarkozy, over the "insulting" compensation he offered for his illegal use of the song during a party conference.
Rolling Stone's Kevin O'Donnell described the song as, "a noisy New Order-style synth jam."
The version that appears on Oracular Spectacular is updated from earlier versions that appear on the group's EPs Time to Pretend (2005) and We (Don't) Care (2004). A track entitled "Kids (Afterschool Dance Megamix)" appears on the album Climbing to New Lows (2005).
On December 1, 2009, the track was announced as a nominee at the 52nd Grammy Awards in the category Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals.
Usage examples of "kids".
PA speakers affixed to the balcony booped loudly, signaling the end of the period, and the kids began to file out of the auditorium, not one of them even looking back at her over their shoulders.
Nerese, is that we had a teacher here, a volunteer no less, local guy, terrific guy, was a very successful television writer out in California, came back to town, came to us, offered to teach a writing class off the cuff, got stood up by the kids three four times in a row before I could make it happen.
I feel like I owe this guy for what he did for the kids here, you know?
Principal Egan finally, finally, after three days of false starts, herded seven students into the faculty lounge, the kids all flat-faced, eyes averted, not a smile in the bunch.
Ray was becoming more and more focused on her and, losing some of his gun-shyness around the kids, he gave them his first clear-eyed look.
Ray thinking how odd it was that these projects kids, witness all their lives to such extremes in human behavior, would be so easily shocked by the slightest breach of teacher decorum.
We went by bus and it took so long to get there I was a old lady with six kids and eight grandchildren by the time we got there.
He also was in the Army and had four kids who are my mother and uncles.
Bondo said gently, still smiling, the kids equally getting off on how Efram had made her laugh.
These were the kids who, in the midst of earth science, gym, algebra, cafeteria stench would manage to knock out a handwritten thirty-page story or a collection of poems, drop it on his desk at the end of class and split.
Anyways Eddie, he was a really strict parent, brooked no bullshit from his kids, so Dub, he was kind of in and out of trouble with his dad on a steady basis.
Miss MacGowan had on more than one occasion nearly gotten her killed by using the example of her deportment as a cudgel to pound the other kids into feeling worse about themselves than they already did.
I was told he drove a truck for Pepsi, drove from five in the morning till three in the afternoon, came home the same time as the kids from school, came home drunk, never said a word to anybody, just emptied his wallet on the dining room table for the, you know, for whatever was needed, then collapsed in his TV chair without ever turning the TV on.
Paulus Hook kids were desperate for passionate teachers, no matter where their true motivations lay.
I get on the train to go to school, go the two stops with a million other kids, get off on the platform, train pulls out and .