n. pl. chil·dren(chĭl
drən)
1. a. A person between birth and puberty.
b. A person who has not attained maturity or the age of legal majority.
2. a. An unborn infant; a fetus.
b. An infant; a baby.
3. One who is childish or immature.
4. Someone to whom a specified person is a parent.
5. A member of a tribe; descendant: children of Abraham.
6. a. An individual regarded as strongly affected by another or by a specified time, place, or circumstance: a child of nature; a child of the Sixties.
b. A product or result of something specified: “Times Square is a child of the 20th century” (Richard F. Shepard).