Dictionary
neonate
noun
A newborn infant; recently born baby.
Exact(11)
If the amniotic membranes do not rupture during birth, the neonate must struggle to break free from the encapsulating membranes.
Typically, moms with young calves like this travel almost continually, so it's rare to get a chance to document these neonate indicators.
While Descartes considered whether a neonate or even young children might have consciousness of this kind, in the end he rejected this hypothesis, insisting on the "reflective" nature of consciousness.
"Full, unabashed, total irradiation of a neonate," Dr. Sclafani said, adding, "This poor, defenseless baby".
A neonate with its quarter-grown brain cannot feed or cling or even manage its own temperature control.
"The evacuation time [from Nauru to Australia] is reported to be 24-36 hours, during which time an acutely unwell neonate [newly born baby] would deteriorate and could die," the report states.
Similar(37)
True, sometimes it's cast as a neonate-in-waiting, looking ahead hopefully, fearfully, to being born into real life.
The consultant, who was banned from operating on children for three years, faced four days of intense questioning over the controversial arterial switch operation in neonates - children under 30 days.
The smallest of the living reptiles typically have the fewest offspring, often laying only one or two eggs or producing only one or two neonates.
Daboia is a live-bearer, and females commonly produce litters of more than 25 neonates.
Clutches of eggs and litters of neonates vary widely in reptiles and are species-dependent.
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