Sometimes, this may be intensified as some modern parents have been labelled «helicopter parents»,
constantly hovering over their children, trying to solve their problems for them in an effort to protect them and keep them happy.
It's probably the closest thing to having a personal trainer without having someone
constantly hovering over you.
If you notice your cat
constantly hovering over the water bowl, it may be a sign of kidney disease.
The salespeople gave us enough customer space to browse the cars on our own and were not
constantly hovering over us.
Affleck's Nick Dunne slides from sympathetic to slime ball effortlessly and the performance is littered with enough incriminating smirks to keep the question mark
constantly hovering over his head.
This occurs often with «helicopter» parents who are
constantly hovering over their children, and do so much for them, that the children grow up feeling inadequate to cope with life.
So, if you have a baby that puts absolutely everything in their mouth, then you're a parent who's always on edge about what baby is putting in their mouth and
constantly hovering over them to make sure they don't poison themselves.
Instead of
constantly hovering over them, a little freedom provides them the opportunity to make their own choices, rather than just go with whatever we've decided for them.
They all agreed that, as much as it's a bad idea to
constantly hover over your kids, it may also be dangerous to act too aloof; parenting is not something that should be polarized.
I never got the sense that the player would have to
constantly hover over their party member's back to make sure they would engage enemies.
Not exact matches
He tells CNBC Make It that a micromanager supervises an «excessive» amount,
constantly checks the work performance of employees and
hovers over day - to - day tasks of his or her workers.
Hovering over and around your child
constantly is not how we build independent young adults.
Typically, helicopter parents not only
hover over their child, but also focus
constantly on how great their child is.
Walking into rooms full of only men, sitting in chairs
hovered over by men, advised and talked down to by her board that is only men, compared
constantly to her father and reminded repeatedly that he handed
over the business to her late husband, and in one significant moment, even talked to sharply by Bradlee himself (a scene lifted out of the mundane by just the look Streep gives, and he ignores), the actor gives an outstanding portrayal of a woman finding her feet.
The city springs to life with throngs of people, rich colors, quick cuts, pulsating music, the spectre of skyscrapers
hovering over Asia's largest slum, shaky cameras following kids running through the streets, and a story
constantly cutting back and forth in time.
Many North American parents tend to «overparent» their kids; this is also known as «helicopter parenting,» where they essentially
hover over their child
constantly, telling them what to do, when and how to do it, making sure homework is completed, choosing their child's subjects, checking and editing the final results, and badgering the child's teachers to improve his or her grades.