- children,
including maintaining proper standards of behaviour,
nannies and
nursemaids might easily establish the
close kind of
relationship with the children...
- A
pulled elbow, also
known as
nursemaid's elbow or a
radial head subluxation, is when the
ligament that
wraps around the
radial head
slips off. Often...
- Hyades, they were
sometimes called the Atlantides, Dodonides, or Nysiades,
nursemaids and
teachers of the
infant Dionysus. The
Pleiades were
thought to have...
-
daughter as well as
sisters of
imperial consorts. A
title was
granted to
nursemaids of
emperors and
attendants of
imperial consorts.
Noblewomen were divided...
-
Virginia Woolf and
published in 1925,
describes something comparable: A
nursemaid speaks to a man who is her
patient "deeply, softly, like a
mellow organ...
- Inverness.
MacDonald and her
sister Ruby
first entered royal service as
nursemaids to six-w****s-old
Princess Elizabeth of York
under governess Marion Crawford...
-
forts and
canals in Russia. Born in Moscow,
Pushkin was
entrusted to
nursemaids and
French tutors, and
spoke mostly French until the age of ten. He became...
-
literature and
Hindu mythology, the
Krittika are
known as the six
mothers or
nursemaids of the war god
Kartikeya (also
known as
Skanda or Murugan), who was nurtured...
- Tegleva, was a
Russian noblewoman who
served as a
nursemaid in the
Russian Imperial Household. As
nursemaid to the
children of
Emperor Nicholas II and Empress...
- children's
fates as well. In well-to-do households,
children were
cared for by
nursemaids (nutrices,
singular nutrix,
which can mean
either a wet
nurse who might...