Sentences with phrase «obvious place for children»

The standing platform should have enough room to stand steady, with an obvious place for your child to hang on to while standing up.

Not exact matches

But as the years went by, it became more and more obvious especially to Beth and to Tara: no matter how many children they cared for and lovingly placed into new families, there were always more motherless or abandoned children there to take their place.
Some of the shops with more fragile merchandise have started (for obvious reasons) to place their fairy doors in the shop window or very close to the front of the shop to avoid over excited children running in and boisterously running around hunting.
Knowing that he had only been in child care for an hour, it was obvious to me that she was mad about having to care for a crying baby for an hour and there wasn't anything more for me to do, but take my baby out for some ice cream and find a place to regroup.
We educate for various reasons, of course, but at the most basic level, we teach our children lore, skills, beliefs, and a sense of their place in the scheme of things in order to perpetuate the family, the tribe, the nation, and finally — though our teachings sometimes veer from the ideal or ignore the obvious — the human race itself.
One of the most obvious places to walk around with children, yet one easily forgotten because of its position right in the heart of Cape Town's city bowl, Company's Gardens at the top end of Adderley Street, where it meets Wale Street, remains one of the loveliest parks for children in which to ramble and play.
Although in her later years Rosa Bonheur might have made fun of some of the more far - fetched eccentricities of the members of the community, and disapproved of the additional strain which her father's apostolate placed on her overburdened mother, it is obvious that the Saint - Simonian ideal of equality for women — they disapproved of marriage, their trousered feminine costume was a token of emancipation, and their spiritual leader, Le Père Enfantin, made extraordinary efforts to find a Woman Messiah to share his reign — made a strong impression on her as a child, and may well have influenced her future course of behavior.
Please forgive me for stating the obvious: there are mountains of scientific evidence, plenty of sound reasons and abundant common sense imploring the leaders of India, China, the US and the rest of the over-developed and under - developed world to consider that the seemingly endless, global expansion of large - scale industrialization and production capabilities, now overspreading the surface of Earth, could be approaching a point in history when these unbridled big - business activities could dangerously destablize frangible global ecosystems, irreversibly degrade the environment, recklessly dissipate Earth's natural resource base and, perhaps, destroy our planetary home as a fit place for human habitation by our children.
Those who know me know that children hold a special place in my heart, so fundraising for children was an obvious choice.
One spokesman enunciated what has become obvious to rational observers: «The courts are rarely the best place for resolving private disputes about the care of children
After all, in the search for effective strategies to secure the long - term health and prosperity of our democracy, America's youngest children, keepers of our common future, are an obvious place to start.
See the research and articles at http://www.thelizlibrary.org/liz/) So, given that there are just not all that many options to choose from in deciding upon a child custody arrangement, and given that those options overwhelmingly will be constrained or even dictated by fairly obvious facts about the parties» circumstances such as work and school schedules, or how far apart they live from each other, and similar considerations, one really has to query what all the painstaking attention to detail and «science» (or pretext to science) is all about if, when all is said and done, the decision will boil down to the application of a default personal preference, and pragmatic ways of arranging custody and visitation schedules to accomplish this while avoiding liability for placing children into situations in which detriment too obviously or easily can be proved to be the direct result of the arrangement.
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