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  1. May 23, 2019 · Generally, your parents, siblings, spouses, and children are considered immediate family. Any grandparents/children, cousins, uncles, aunts, or otherwise would be your extended family. You living with your husband is living with immediate family. Your parents are still considered immediate family.

  2. Mar 1, 2022 · The meaning would exclude immediate family, i.e. mothers, fathers, children, aunts, uncles, close cousins, etc., but I don't know that there is a formal definition of how distant a distant relative would have to be.

  3. There would nearly always be a reason for a gathering. Whether it is Christmas, "Sunday gravy" or in my family "Nan's birthday". In your picture it is Thanksgiving. One term you might find useful is "Dinner party". This suggests a fairly small number of friends (or extended family members) coming to eat dinner at someone's home in the evening.

  4. I'd need to say "immediate family member" to restrict the term to parents and siblings. And I don't have any short phrase to indicate "relatives other than immediate family members". I'd assume that a question asking about a relative could be answered with a parent, a sibling, an aunt/uncle, cousin, or a more distant relative.

  5. Mar 12, 2013 · I've come across someone trying to write about a man who lost his wife and child to the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. Is there any term like "widower" or "orphan" but for describing someone w...

  6. Oct 22, 2022 · In a formal and/or legal context, when you want to refer to a person's loved ones, what word or phrase would you use? I was thinking perhaps "next of kin", but checking various dictionaries, I get the feeling that that refers to family/relatives only, excluding close friends?

  7. Jan 19, 2019 · Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  8. Jan 14, 2021 · "There are four people in my family." is a simple and correct expression. It is probably more common, if you are asked to talk about your family, to describe them: Some families are simple. Tell me about your family. There's my wife and we have three children. You don't need to say "five people" because we can count. On the other hand, some are ...

  9. Feb 20, 2021 · P.S. Omi Di, I think your question asks whether there is a one-word noun in English to describe the first child and last child in a family. My answer is fine albeit a little outmoded. There are nominal phrases, open-form compound nouns, or adnouns to describe this phenomenon that may be better than my outmoded forms:

  10. Jan 3, 2017 · "baby of the family" The youngest member of an immediate family. A member of an immediate family who behaves as, or is treated as though they were the youngest member of a family. As the baby of the family, Jack had always been a little spoiled. In this sentence, "Jack" could be a mature adult and the phrase may imply some age difference.

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