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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
newborn
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a newborn baby
▪ There’s plenty of help and advice for people with newborn babies.
a newborn child
▪ He was holding the newborn child in his arms.
a newborn infant
▪ Newborn infants only a few hours old can distinguish between different voices.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
baby
▪ Within moments of our first encounter, he has whipped out a Photo-Me booth shot of his newborn baby daughter.
▪ No one expects a newborn baby to go out and get a job before learning the basic life skills and getting schooling.
▪ It wouldn't have mattered if Sandoz had been as pure as a newborn baby here, John thought.
▪ I could beat any newborn baby in the world crying.
▪ She put her bag with the story on the passenger seat and drove as if it were a newborn baby.
▪ With the smoothest stroke in the game and his newborn baby at home, this was easy labor for Tim Legler.
▪ How does one recognise pain in a newborn baby to whom one can not speak?
▪ In 1987 our newborn baby died.
child
▪ One example might be where a newborn child developed an infection requiring special care, but recovered in a few days.
▪ The newborn child can suffer from physical dependence, withdrawal symptoms or even serious birth defects.
infant
▪ What are the factors that result in either early or delayed feelings of love for a newborn infant?
▪ Further studies are needed to validate the suggested criteria for newborn infants.
▪ The 2-year-old is cognitively and affectively different from the newborn infant.
▪ Retractions were sensitive but not specific, and grunting was not significantly associated with hypoxaemia in these newborn infants.
son
▪ Joseph and Mary with their newborn son lying in a manger.
▪ Under a window lay our newborn son crowned by a spectrum, the seven strands of vision.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
Newborn infants spend a lot of time sleeping.
Newborn kittens cannot open their eyes.
▪ a mother sheep with her newborn lamb
▪ Relatives and friends all wanted to see the newborn baby.
▪ The average weight of a newborn baby is about seven pounds.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Arjun was shoved on to the camel with the sick and newborn lambs.
▪ But all that toing-and-froing would endanger newborn piglets, and Baxter knew no farmer would accept increased losses.
▪ Further studies are needed to validate the suggested criteria for newborn infants.
▪ It must not be assumed that the absence of a 24-hour rhythm in newborn babies means that they have no rhythms at all.
▪ It wouldn't have mattered if Sandoz had been as pure as a newborn baby here, John thought.
▪ My ears, everyone must have noticed, were almost two times as big as my little newborn face.
▪ Usually when the woman had her children she would take the newborn back to her parents home, sometimes for months.
▪ What are the factors that result in either early or delayed feelings of love for a newborn infant?
The Collaborative International Dictionary
newborn

newborn \new"born`\ (n[=u]"b[^o]rn`), a. Recently born.
--Shak.

newborn

newborn \new"born`\ (n[=u]"b[^o]rn`), n. A baby recently born, usually less than one month old; a neonate.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
newborn

also new-born, c.1300, from new + born. As a noun from 1879.

Wiktionary
newborn

a. 1 recently born. 2 born anew, reborn. n. A recently born baby.

WordNet
newborn
  1. adj. recently borne; "a newborn infant"

  2. having just or recently arisen or come into existence; "new nations"; "with newborn fears" [syn: newly arisen, new-sprung(a)]

newborn

n. a baby from birth to four weeks [syn: neonate, newborn infant, newborn baby]

Gazetteer
Newborn, GA -- U.S. town in Georgia
Population (2000): 520
Housing Units (2000): 187
Land area (2000): 1.597121 sq. miles (4.136523 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.597121 sq. miles (4.136523 sq. km)
FIPS code: 54656
Located within: Georgia (GA), FIPS 13
Location: 33.516980 N, 83.694572 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 30262
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Newborn, GA
Newborn
Wikipedia
Newborn (disambiguation)

Newborn or New Born may refer to:

Newborn (Elbow song)

"Newborn" is the 3rd single by English alternative rock band Elbow and is the 3rd single from their debut album, Asleep in the Back. There were 4 formats (all of which were released solely in the UK): one Cd promo, one 12" Vinyl remix promo, 2CD, and 12" Vinyl. Several of the songs on the single had been previously on The Newborn EP.

The Genesis song " Entangled" was an influence on the musical arrangement of the song.

Newborn (band)

Newborn was a Hungarian hardcore punk band with progressive metal influences, formed in Budapest, Hungary. The band was active from 1998 to 2002.

Newborn (surname)

Newborn is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Ira Newborn (born 1949), American composer
  • Jud Newborn (born 1952), American author
  • Lin Newborn (1974-1998), murder victim
  • Phineas Newborn, Sr., jazz big band leader in Memphis. His sons:
    • Phineas Newborn, Jr. (1931-1989), jazz pianist
    • Calvin Newborn (born 1933), American jazz guitarist
Newborn (album)

Newborn is the eighth album by James Gang, released in 1975, and the only released on Atlantic Records.

Guitarist Tommy Bolin and singer Roy Kenner left the band, and were replaced by guitarist Richard Shack and vocalist Bubba Keith. This album is notable for being perhaps the most boogie-based James Gang release and for featuring a cover of the Elvis Presley classic " Heartbreak Hotel".

Both Newborn and its follow-up Jesse Come Home have been reissued on one CD by Wounded Bird Records.

The album cover artwork features a reproduction of Salvador Dalí's "Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of the New Man"

Usage examples of "newborn".

She looked, Ahl thought, like a sul cub: newborn, soft and round, still covered with down.

A healthy newborn baby, crying vigorously and moving all limbs, would ideally have an apgar score of eight to ten.

Probably heading up toward some herd above on Level One, hoping to snatch a newborn or to take a few bites out of a careless Youth straying too far from the edge of the group.

With that ancient picture on the back of your dilapidated dollar and that newborn profit in your bullrushes, what the hell river did you think it was?

Then he took up her campstool and easel, and they walked together alongside the Roman aqueduct to the centre of the town, under an avenue of tall, spreading plane trees, yellow with the first delicate leaves of Spring like the feathers of a newborn chick.

According to an Argentine legend from the last century, Maria Antonia Correa followed her lover into that arid land, carrying their newborn child.

Clouds surged in toward their blades, only to be flung on wild curves by the newborn eddies as they began rotating.

And there are, of course, other examples: the treatment of endocrinologic disorders with appropriate hormones, the prevention of hemolytic disease of the newborn, the treatment and prevention of various nutritional disorders, and perhaps just around the corner the management of Parkinsonism and sickle-cell anemia.

Flipping from page to page, she landed on a photo of a Fanconi face and saw in it the face of her newborn daughter.

Unlike Flenser, who usually melded pups into existing packs in an approximation of nature, Steel made his totally newborn.

The irises were of an unusual and very beautiful pewter-grey like the eyes of the newborn, the legacy perhaps of some medieval invader from Kirgiz or Naiman.

On this occasion, she thought the doctor was gentle and kind, she was impressed that so many people were there to help her, and although she felt that the nurses who bathed Lia with Safeguard did not get her quite as clean as she had gotten her newborns with Laotian stream water, her only major complaint concerned the hospital food.

Sinni had placed him as a newborn on the streets of Quosh, to be raised a dragonboy and paired with a fine leatherback dragon.

This was a reference to ophthalmia neonatorum, the blindness of newborn infants caused by mothers infected with venereal disease.

Ophthalmia neonatorum was easily prevented by a solution of nitrate of silver dropped into each eye of the newborn child, she noted.