0 to take care of a child, usually for a limited time, without being the child's legal parent:
1 to encourage the development or growth of ideas or feelings:
2 used to refer to someone or something connected with the care of children, usually for a limited time, by someone who is not the child's legal parent:
3 to take care of a child as if it were your own, usually for a limited time, without being the child’s legal parent
4 to encourage the development or growth of ideas or feelings:
I try to foster an appreciation for classical music in my students.
5 providing a home or care to a child when you are not their legal parent, or receiving such care, usually for a limited time:
A thing has dignity when it is not opposed to the higher and nobler virtues but rather accords with them and fosters them.
They also fostered new forms of commercial relations between individuals.
Whether they fostered or hampered creativity depends on how one defines it.
The system itself fostered a constipated, inward-turning national posture, and attitudes of fear and hostility towards neighbours.
Because this object is not given by someone, a relationship with it incurs no obligation and fosters no dependency, as in gift exchange.
Theory posits cognitive processes fostering acquisition as well as how these processes are engaged through input that a task designer can manipulate.
At 36 and 54 months, two additional ratings, fostering exploration and intrusiveness reversed !, were added to the composite.
In the low-aggressive line, there are multiple behaviors affected by fostering and only a single behavior influenced by endotoxin, in interaction with the fostering condition.
中文繁体
照顧, 收養,代養,撫育(他人子女,通常指有限的一段時間), 鼓勵…
More中文简体
照顾, 收养,代养,抚育(他人子女,通常指有限的一段时间), 鼓励…
MoreEspañol
acoger, criar, fomentar…
MorePortuguês
criar, cuidar, acolher (na família)…
More日本語
(里親として子供)を育てる…
MoreTürk dili
(fikir, durum, his) gelişmesine yardımcı olmak…
MoreFrançais
élever, encourager, favoriser…
MoreCatalan
acollir…
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