teething ring


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  • noun

Synonyms for teething ring

device used for an infant to suck or bite on

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
"To help babies and children with teething, parents and caregivers should try non-medicine options such as rubbing or massaging the gums or a teething ring.
Lisa was driving with baby Lucy-Jo in the back of her car, with her daughter happily playing with the teething ring.
The FDA recommends that parents and caregivers follow the American Academy of Pediatrics' recommendations for treating teething pain: Use a teething ring that has been chilled in the refrigerator or gently rub the child's gums with your finger.
Anything he finds on the floor is likely to become a teething ring.
Mrs Kitching judged the monthly competition, Yesterday's Treasures, awarding Sue Wardman first for a Victorian child's teething ring, Celia Thompson second with a 1920 cloche hat and Margaret Kallagher third with a very old christening gown.
For instance, the American Academy of Pediatrics suggests that parents give a child a teething ring chilled in the refrigerator, or use a finger to gently rub or massage the child's gums.
A: One of the most effective ways is picking up a teething ring from your local pharmacy.
Anita went over to the baby aisle and picked up a plastic teething ring, one of those things with tiny animals floating around in liquid.
QMANY years ago my wife inherited from her stepmother a silver bear which is attached to an ivory teething ring.
A CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis demonstrated cystic circumferential wall thickening along the gallbladder fundus (resembling an infant's teething ring) without associated pericholecystic fluid or fat stranding (Figure 1).
Tied to her bouquet was the grandmother of the groom's sterling silver teething ring.
But the toxic load doesn't end at the teething ring. Last year the EWG found carcinogens in 28 percent of personal care products, including more than 55 percent of baby bubble baths, soaps, and shampoos.
He has tasted all things apart from the teething ring I bought him from Boots, which is flung aside with disgust.
This isn't such a bad thing when I consider my parental ineptitude when Ava, my daughter, was a baby - accidentally giving her one of the cat's chew toys as a teething ring; almost pushing her pram into the canal because there was a lovely lady sunning herself on the other bank - are the two printable examples that spring to mind.