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Children with irregular bedtimes may be more prone to having behavioral problems, according to a new study. Research published on Oct. 14 in Pediatrics showed that not going to bed at a regular ...
English, like most Germanic languages, has many regular ("weak") verbs, like work, worked, worked (in standard dictionary format, listing present, past, and past participle), and a bewildering ...
Having a regular schedule matters — especially when it comes to young people of all ages. According to a new research brief from the nonprofit Economic Policy Institute, children of parents ...
Late or irregular bed-times for children can induce symptoms similar to jet lag as well as behavioural problems and slower development, a British survey has found. Some 10,000 children born ...
Kids are starting their periods earlier, and how long it takes to become regular is changing, according to a new study published in JAMA Network Open on May 29.
The behavior survey included 25 questions. Kids with irregular bedtimes had more behavioral problems than did children with regular bedtimes, according to both their teachers and their mothers.
The process beginned hundreds of years ago and bringed a huge change in our use of the language. Now researchers believe more of the irregular verbs that make English such a rich and varied ...
Irregular bedtime hours in children may be linked to behavioral problems, a new study revealed. The research, which appeared in the US journal Pediatrics on Monday, found that lifelong problems ...
Irregular bedtimes at age 5 were not associated with poorer brainpower in girls or boys at age 7. But irregular bedtimes at age 3 were associated with lower scores in reading, math and spatial ...
Most children go through a phase where they treat irregular verbs like they are regular. The interesting thing is that they do this after they have already learned the irregular versions.
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