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Meanings of punish children in English
We have no meanings for "punish children" in our records yet.
Usage of punish children in English
1
Schools are to be banned from using seclusion rooms to punishchildren.
2
We punishchildren and kick them out of school and we deny them education.
3
Resistance to law changes on the right to physically punishchildren has been remarkably strong.
4
This results in officers being eager to punishchildren rather than protect them from coercion and control.
5
To reprove and punishchildren for flights of imagination, John Fiske argued, was one of the things done only by a barbaric people.
6
Katherine Rake, the chief executive of the Family and Parenting Institute, said it was important not to punishchildren for the decisions of parents.
7
The aim here is not to punishchildren, but to send them this message: We love you, and we don't want to lose you.
8
They conceal themselves in lawns and produce small, sharp stickers that torture picnickers and punishchildren who dare to run across the yard barefoot.
9
No-one feels good about punishingchildren on Christmas Day.
10
Instead, they both turned sullen, like punishedchildren.
11
An entirely arbitrary cap on large families' total benefits punisheschildren for having too many brothers and sisters.
12
Is punishing parents also punishingchildren?
13
Indeed, teachers have found means of punishingchildren, as for example, the "dry lunch" in Detroit schools.
14
Punishment can worsen bedwetting Punishingchildren for bedwetting won't solve the problem and may make it worse, researchers say.
15
I remembered wanting to tell them, to remind them, that God punisheschildren for the sins of their parents.
16
"Wouldn't you punishchildren at all, when they misbehaved?" asked Gilbert.