bring up - to look after (and be responsible for) children until they become adult;, educate - to teach, often at school, college or university, praise good behaviour - to say nice things about something someone has done, reward good behaviour - to give a person something because they have done something well, rebel against - to oppose someone in authority – in this case, parents, disobey - to deliberately do the opposite of what someone asks you to do, or to deliberately not follow a rule, encourage - to suggest in a positive way or try to persuade your children that it would be good to do something, or try to give them confidence to do something, force - to make your children do something (that they don’t want to do), give in to - to finally agree with someone (when previously you have been arguing about something) or finally agree to do something;, spoil - to always let children have everything they want, so that they learn only to think of themselves, nag - to frequently talk to someone in a critical way,often trying to get them to do something they don’t want to do, tell someone off - to tell someone they have done something wrong, usually in an angry or critical way, shame - to say things (about someone) which makes that person feel embarrassed or bad about a particular situation, punish - to give someone a punishment (something unpleasant) or make them suffer because they have broken the rules (or the law),

Vocabulary raising children: verbs

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