"Child" and "Kid" are both ways of saying that the person is not a teenager yet, but is older than a baby or toddler. Both refer to the same age range.
He was older than his sisters and the older brother died from a horse accident making him the older kid.
Older then the kid.
No. Your child will never grow any older than a teenager and he will not ever marry anyone.
Yes, but the parent must be in the theatre with them. If the child reaches 17 or older than can attend the movie by themselves.
Depends on the age of the kid. If the child is a toddler than 15 or older. But id=f the child is 4 and up the average age is 13.
You probably could, but, you would be putting your kid into a difficult situation when he/she is older, as the kid will get a lot of funny looks & taunting over the name.
I would say that it doesn't sound like a very safe situation. Why is he living with the mother of his child and saying he's single? It sounds like trouble.
CODMW2 :P or.... KIRBY!
pretend to them that your 4 years older, and if they already know your not, tough luck kid!
No. He has 2 older brothers and an older sister. You can learn this by listening to "Soundtrack 2 My Life" on his first album Man On The Man: The End of Day.
If you mean sandwiches for more than one kid/child, it would be kids' (s apostrophe) sandwiches.For one kid: kid's sandwichesFor more than one kid: kids' sandwiches
In American English they mean about the same. "Kid" is more of a casual/slang usage than child. Also, kid is the term for a young goat.