English to Arabic Dictionary orphan

orphan

يتيم
definition
verb
John was orphaned at 12
make (a person or animal) an orphan.
noun
She grew up an orphan , her parents having been killed in a battle which overtook their hometown.
a child whose parents are dead.
the first line of a paragraph set as the last line of a page or column, considered undesirable.
translation of 'orphan'
verb
صار يتيما
noun
يتيم,
تم
adjective
يتيم
example
he was left an 'orphan' as a small boy
They chose to adopt an 'orphan' - a baby girl from Russia named Brandy - and their visits to Russian orphanages moved them to explore what they could to help other abandoned children.
The Earl had suggested that David pretend to be an 'orphan' whose parents had been American gentility.
'orphan' chimps
This three-month old baby escaped with a fractured wrist, but is now an 'orphan' as both parents were killed.
Eight years later he returned to France an 'orphan' , his parents having been deported to Auschwitz by the Vichy authorities.
She grew up an 'orphan' , her parents having been killed in a battle which overtook their hometown.
The little girl is an 'orphan' who lost her parents to AIDS.
In a magic mirror which reflects one's innermost desires, the young 'orphan' glimpses his dead parents - and his loneliness and longing is palpable.
The boy who is an 'orphan' was orphaned when his parents died in short succession in 1992.
An adoption official has spoken about the moment when Angelina Jolie adopted an Ethiopian girl made an 'orphan' by AIDS.
an 'orphan' girl
Ill health can also be an important cause of poverty through loss of income, catastrophic health expenses, and 'orphanhood' .
He introduced her to Jamil Chowdhury, a Bangladeshi businessman working on behalf of 'orphans' and destitute young girls in the country's interior villages.
He was 'orphaned' at the age of nine, and got a job as a cabin boy, and through sheer hard graft, worked his way up the ranks.
Susanne and her sisters are AIDS 'orphans' ; their parents both died two years ago.
From boyhood, he learned to keep his feelings to himself, repressing memories of his father and of the emotional impact of early 'orphanhood' .
Khushi is the daughter of a family friend, who becomes part of this household after being 'orphaned' .
He said the impact of the virus would peak in about 20 years when more children were 'orphaned' by the virus.
When the huge waves struck, children were 'orphaned' , homes were destroyed, businesses lost.
Harpt has now set up a school for 'orphans' and destitute children.
Children are 'orphaned' because of the AIDS pandemic or because they are just abandoned.
During the Long First Half of the Twentieth Century, one of the most important factors in the rising age of home-leaving was declining adult mortality, which led to declining rates of 'orphanhood' .
Proper grounds for putting children into care are such things as cruelty, neglect or incapacity on the part of the parents, or because the children are 'orphans' .
The estimates in Figure 7 show, for example, that the estimated probability of 'orphanhood' for a twenty-year old child in 1900 was 0.0.37, meaning that slightly fewer than four percent of twenty-year-olds were orphans.
The puppies were born in the Waikato in a litter of six and were 'orphaned' at three weeks old when their mother was sold.
A SEVEN-year-old Yorkshire child left 'orphaned' by a car crash on the Greek island of Corfu has woken from a coma.
Among the special schools were those providing secondary education for 'orphans' and girls, which were supervised by the Tsar's mother.
He was born in York, the son of an engineer, only to leave for Australia aged 16, three years after he was 'orphaned' .
Many of these children are 'orphaned' , having lost their parents to the AIDs virus.
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