Associations to the word «Juvenile»
Noun
- Hypertension
- Phenotype
- Teenager
- Addiction
- Checklist
- Old
- Trait
- Advisory
- Tay
- Advocacy
- Behavior
- Pm
- Proceeding
- Counselor
- Rooney
- Reform
- Restitution
- Judge
- Assault
- Marijuana
- Tem
- Childhood
- Louse
- Pornography
- Eclipse
- Homelessness
- Adoption
- Cutting
- Downs
- Parkinson
- Sentence
- Suture
- Liaison
- Rights
- Chimpanzee
- Whorl
- Placement
- Deficiency
- Clinic
- Lindsey
- Innocent
- Sore
- Racehorse
- Disease
- Counseling
- Visitation
- Turtle
- Mutation
- Arthropod
- Treatment
Adjective
Wiktionary
JUVENILE, adjective. Young; not fully developed
JUVENILE, adjective. Characteristic of youth or immaturity; childish
JUVENILE, noun. A prepubescent child
JUVENILE, noun. A person not legally of age, or who is younger than may be charged with an offence
JUVENILE, noun. An animal that is not sexually mature
JUVENILE, noun. An actor playing a child's role
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY, noun. (legal) Participation in illegal behaviour by minors.
JUVENILE DELINQUENT, noun. (legal) A persistent young offender; an antisocial minor, one who has committed criminal acts such as theft or violence.
JUVENILE DELINQUENTS, noun. Plural of juvenile delinquent
JUVENILE DETENTION CENTRE, noun. A youth detention centre.
JUVENILE DIABETES, noun. The disease whose main symptom is that the body does not produce insulin.
JUVENILE HALL, noun. A youth detention centre.
JUVENILE HORMONE, noun. Any of a group of sesquiterpene hormones that regulate insect physiology by preventing molting of the exoskeleton and thus development of the larva
JUVENILE OFFENDING, noun. Juvenile delinquency
Dictionary definition
JUVENILE, noun. A young person, not fully developed.
JUVENILE, adjective. Of or relating to or characteristic of or appropriate for children or young people; "juvenile diabetes"; "juvenile fashions".
JUVENILE, adjective. Displaying or suggesting a lack of maturity; "adolescent insecurity"; "jejune responses to our problems"; "their behavior was juvenile"; "puerile jokes".
Wise words
Words are but symbols for the relations of things to one
another and to us; nowhere do they touch upon absolute
truth.