Sentences with phrase «baby enter the house»

It's crucial to stay calm and relaxed when you and the baby enter the house.

Not exact matches

Clark's script blamed the housing crisis on a shortage of supply, growing population and demand, consumers with double the borrowing power they had in 2000, and millennials «who are greater in number than even the baby boomers — and who are now entering the housing market for the first time — and they aren't happy.»
If your dog typically jumps up on you when you enter the house, have someone else carry the baby into the room.
Wipe your dog's paw with a clean disinfected damp rag before allowing them to enter the house or to go near your baby.
When I approached my door and entered the house with a key in one hand and a coffee cup in the other, diaper bag over my shoulder and baby's mouth on my breast, I thought, «damn, I'm good.»
As Baby Boomers enter retirement in record numbers, many are contemplating how to attain their dream retirement home — whether that means downsizing to a smaller house or maintenance - free condo, moving closer to family or relocating to the beach — in the face of diminished investment portfolios, longer expected lifespans and skyrocketing healthcare costs.
For example, when baby comes home for the first time, other people should enter the house first, so the dogs get all their happy «You're home!»
Then the baby can enter the house.
When you bring the newborn home, have one parent enter the house with your newborn's baby blanket.
According to the NMHC report, demand for high - density housing will continue to grow — and is set to hit new highs by 2015 — due to an estimated 78 million downsizing baby boomers, 78 million children of baby boomers graduating from college and entering the workforce, and some 9 million new immigrants.
Baby boomers are expected to enter retirement with less savings and more debt than previous generations, and a new report warns that will bring some housing concerns for this giant generation of home owners.
Of the 8.4 million households that owned their dwelling in 2006, 4.9 million, or 57.9 per cent, had a mortgage, the highest level since 1981 when baby boomers were entering the housing market.
Among those forces were the baby boom, in which post-World War II babies matured and entered the housing market; deregulation of the mortgage finance industry, which gave lenders the freedom to offer a wide variety of loans, and a high inflation rate that combined with soaring housing prices to convince consumers that home ownership was safe and sure.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z