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Discover LudwigThe phrase "nurture character" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to express the idea of fostering someone's character or personality traits. For example: John's parents were committed to nurturing his character, ensuring he had the best possible opportunities for personal growth.
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"Cagliostro represents the first fully-fledged Miyazaki world, not only in the castle setting but its use of space and place to build and nurture character," writes British journalist Andrew Osmund in his book Spirited Away.
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We developed the latter the four activity protocols described below based on the process steps suggested by Narveaz in her adaption of the FCM for Nurturing Character in the Classroom (Narvaez & colleagues, 2009), a four-volume series with each volume focused on one of the four components.
This is contrary to the expected instinctive nurturing character of females.
She compared them to the kitsune of Japanese folklore, which are portrayed "as tricksters, but also as nurturing characters such as guardians and friends".
What cult behemoths like The Sopranos, Orange is the new Black and True Blood do so well is nurture their characters' nuances against an addictive setting.
It's amusing, and perhaps a little arousing, to watch Ms. Judd do violent battle in her full-cotton-sweater soccer-mom outfit — pink cardigan, sensible white T-shirt, gray khakis — after her nurturing suburban character, Becca Winstone, has been revealed as a deadly and relentless former C.I.A. officer.
For the uninitiated fiddling around their family desktop, the original version of "The Sims" was mostly about nurturing humanlike characters through life's minutiae.
Building Stronger, HeAthleticsHandier Men.
"I continue to nurture that part of my brain by developing intricate stories and characters from my everyday life," she tells The Creators Project.
His series hero, Joe Gunther of the Vermont Bureau of Investigation, thinks the mountain topography and long, snowy winters have something to do with nurturing a local character at once "hardy, independent, self-sufficient and sometimes a little cranky".
When it opened on the West End, Mr. Marcus's play stoked controversy for its suggestive portrayal of the relationship between June Buckridge (Ms. Turner), known even to her intimates by the name of her nurturing village nurse character, Sister George, and her baby-doll flatmate, Alice (Clea Alsip), who has her own, highly appropriate nickname, Childie.
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