Aún no tenemos significados para "childher".
1But it's the sons, Mr. Pindar,-thechildher that changes us.
2Bless you, me childher, may you be happy, she says.
3There's a great comfort in childher, and when they grow up we lose them anyway.
4The childher come up yisterday and got them while you'd be down at the counting-room.
5And all the wishes good childher make on May Eve are sure to come thrue.
6It's a foine sthring o' childher ye have, Mrs.
7Could ye be buyin' a home for childher an' dogs for the price of a penny?
8May yer wife clave to you all her days, and be a good mother to your childher.
9I have not got the pay for the spriggin' this month, an' the childher are needin' food.
10And the rest, who were mere babies when you went away, are now grown into fine, hearty childher.
11It's mighty little uv any other man's money-notenough, troth, to get bread for the childher-havewe seen.
12Shure, the childher are in bed, and ye'll be waking them up and sending them into fits, the darlints.
13I can't face Mary an' her childher aginan'sayIlift hermanwidout Christianburial. -Howldyersowl !
14Sure the redskins is as toired as us, and gone home to the wives and childher, bad cess to thim.
15Och hone!" she cried, wringing her hands, "masther dear, why will you lave the wife and the childher?
16An' a single man can't be bothered with cast-off childher, no matter how big his heart is, as we well know.
Childher a través del tiempo