(n.) An infant; a young child of either sex; a baby.
(n.) A doll for children.
Example Sentences:
(1) & I'm like, babes, listen, I think Anna really is going to come & he's like, so I'll have what she's having, boom :(
(2) That culture was reinforced elsewhere, with female staff told to smarten up, wear lipstick, and some required to attend trade shows where “booth babes” – scantily-clad models promoting products - were commonplace.
(3) Large numbers of polymorphous dense Babes-Negri bodies were found in brain neurons of mice sick with street rabies and dying of it.
(4) The transition from the Chipper Jones era to the Upton era is going less than smoothly – Justin, who still has a ways to go to reach his full capabilities, looks like Babe Ruth compared to BJ, who is hitting .179.
(5) Simultaneous reports of George N. Papanicolaou and Aurel Babes and their respective originality are compared.
(6) Terkel won a Pulitzer prize for these stories, like that of Hobart Foote, or Babe Secoli the supermarket checker, who described customers engaged in something less like shopping than dodgem cars with trolleys, and garbage man Nick Salerno, discoursing on his long experience of how people pack their rubbish: "You get just like the milkman's horse — used to it."
(7) This allegation is contained in a new book Call Me Babe … sorry, Call Me Dave, by Lord Michael Ashcroft and Isabel Oakeshott, which is now being serialised in the Mail.
(8) But isn't there a bit of him that wants to gloat; to tell all the kids who thought he was a nerd that he's now this babe magnet, this sex god, this… And now he really is flushed and flustered.
(9) In the cytoplasm of brain neurons of monkeys infected with Yuli virus relatively small Babes-Negri bodies with more or less apparent internal structure were detected.
(10) When a fortysomething regional television star took a screen test at Sky Sports insiders suspected that producers instantly marked her down against the bevy of gorgeous babes competing for presenting gigs.
(11) Their market wants humour that they are able to justify with the phrase "It's only a joke, love" or "Where's your sense of humour, babe".
(12) This is the martyrdom of an entire sex and it is foolish and childlike, made by babes.
(13) She was first an actor – early roles included a part in Babe: A Pig In The City – until she became too frustrated with the characters on offer to continue and in the early 00s began to pursue a career as a director.
(14) At the end, Skin led dancers ranging from babes-in-arms to grandmothers.
(15) Sadly for any potential babe-botherers out there, the film is actually a dispassionate coming-of-age indie flick set in a washed-out town on the west coast of Sweden, where two teenage girls attempt to navigate the psychological minefield of those strange years just before womanhood.
(16) Babes in red jerseys were raised to the skies in triumph while old ladies sang football songs leaning on their grandchildren.
(17) Desmond is hoping he could lure Cheryl Cole into hosting Big Brother – an effort fuelled by this morning's Daily Star splash "Cheryl's New B Bro Babe" – but the star's camp totally dismissed the public overtures.
(18) So now we have to start again, I went to Dave, babes, even if Mantel's literary kaftans conceal a bitter republican whose misguided hatred of the constitutional monarchy is surpassed only by her allegiance to the discredited regime of Joseph Stalin, whose statue, according to her LRB article, she outrageously proposes to erect in Budleigh Salterton's historic town centre, maybe you could have considered the availability of other on-trend & award-winning lady writers on vintage themes before you dissed the inspiration for our Hilary tote?
(19) Instead, all I can remember is that she was at the vanguard of the Tory revolution, one of these supposedly "new" Conservatives , who would do for Cameron what Blair's babes did for him – get him elected, first, and then after that, do whatever he said.
(20) I'm like babes, be cool, have you ever thought of hiring *racks brains for uber-normal woman* Dita Von Teese?
Bantling
Definition:
(n.) A young or small child; an infant. [Slightly contemptuous or depreciatory.]
Example Sentences:
(1) Previous studies (Bantles, J. P., Feracci, H. M., Shinger, B., and Hubbard, A. L. (1987) J.