Person who, at an early age, develops one or more skills at a level far beyond the norm for their age.
A prodigy whose talents are recognized at an early age.
Synonyms
Examples for "wunderkind "
Examples for "wunderkind "
1 The Tea Party wunderkind Ted Cruz does not have a plan B.
2 It adds up to an unexpected tangle for a Silicon Valley wunderkind .
3 Mrs. Hooper stared with newfound awe and admiration at the deductive wunderkind .
4 The then 16-year-old pop wunderkind is rocking an egg-yolk yellow athletic ensemble.
5 This week I talked with American wunderkind Ashima Shiraishi, who is in Tokyo.
1 It changes pretty quickly because people get tired of the child prodigy thing.
2 I don't know, really, but she was a child prodigy on the violin.
3 On the back was a brief account of the child prodigy .
4 Freddy Kempf has all the appearance of having been a typical child prodigy .
5 Blaise Pascal, a French mathematician, physicist, and religious philosopher, was a child prodigy .
6 There is no doubt that Artemis is a child prodigy .
7 Such comments reflect the sense of humor that comes with raising a child prodigy .
8 Brendel was a child prodigy who composed, painted, and wrote poetry in his youth.
9 The death of the child prodigy 12-year-old Tito Traversa rocked the global climbing community.
10 He became a child prodigy and made his first radio broadcast at age of four.
11 It is a child prodigy of the free-enterprise 1980s.
12 The metamorphosis of Michael Owen from child prodigy to fledgling starlet is all but complete.
13 His other clients have included former world number one Nick Price and child prodigy Michelle Wie.
14 Diedre was born in Canada, and as a child prodigy quickly came to national attention there.
15 Critically feted as a child prodigy , O Lionaird was recorded from the age of seven onwards.
16 The enthusiasm he had aroused as a child prodigy was not awarded to the matured musician.
Other examples for "child prodigy"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Translations for child prodigy