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Synonyms for suckle
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : suhk-uh l |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈsʌk əl |
Définition of suckle
Origin :- c.1400, perhaps a causative form of Middle English suken "to suck" (see suck), or a back-formation from suckling (though this word is attested only from mid-15c.). Related: Suckled; suckling.
- verb nurse
- Before daybreak, the doe always returned to suckle her little one.
- Extract from : « Creatures of the Night » by Alfred W. Rees
- Again and again he reverts to the mother's duty to suckle the child herself.
- Extract from : « Erasmus and the Age of Reformation » by Johan Huizinga
- The calf should be allowed to suckle or be fed from the pail for six or eight months.
- Extract from : « Cattle and Cattle-breeders » by William M'Combie
- Because the mother will not be likely to recover so long as she continues to suckle at all.
- Extract from : « Remarks on the Subject of Lactation » by Edward Morton
- Willingly the gentle animal allowed the little child to suckle it.
- Extract from : « Legends of the Rhine » by Wilhelm Ruland
- It may be asked: what if the mother is ill and unable to suckle her child?
- Extract from : « Spontaneous Activity in Education » by Maria Montessori
- We will go back to Nature,—though she, too, can suckle "killers."
- Extract from : « The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 15, No. 87, January, 1865 » by Various
- When the Leopardess returned, she asked for her children, that she might suckle them.
- Extract from : « Nights With Uncle Remus » by Joel Chandler Harris
- In my opinion mothers ought to nurse and suckle their own children.
- Extract from : « Plutarch's Morals » by Plutarch
- But with no one to suckle them, the babies would have starved to death.
- Extract from : « The Saracen: Land of the Infidel » by Robert Shea
Antonyms for suckle
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019