Word for young person

What is another word for Young person?

  • youth

    child

  • juvenile

    teenager, child

  • younker

  • minor

    teenager

  • teenager

    child, person before the age of maturity

  • kid

    child, person before the age of maturity

  • youngster

    teenager

  • boy

    child, person before the age of maturity

  • girl

    person before the age of maturity

  • adolescent

    teenager

  • spring chicken

  • junior

    teenager, person before the age of maturity

  • teenybopper

  • young adult

  • child

  • stripling

    young

  • shaver

  • punk

  • student

  • pupil

  • lad

  • sapling

  • lass

  • fledgling

  • puppy

  • moppet

  • urchin

  • cub

  • chick

  • squirt

Use filters to view other words, we have 101 synonyms for young person.

Synonyms for young person

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Photo search results for Young person

Woman Wearing Black Eyeglasses Closeup Photo of Woman With Brown Coat and Gray Top Man on Gray Shirt Portrait Woman in White Dress Shirt and Black Skirt Woman in Orange Crew Neck T-shirt Three Toddler Eating on White Table

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girl, teenager, young girl, teenager, roller skates girl, teenager, young woman, portrait, leather girl, teenager, young fashion, woman, lovely

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Synonyms for Young person. (2016). Retrieved 2023, April 12, from https://thesaurus.plus/synonyms/young_person

Synonyms for Young person. N.p., 2016. Web. 12 Apr. 2023. <https://thesaurus.plus/synonyms/young_person>.

Synonyms for Young person. 2016. Accessed April 12, 2023. https://thesaurus.plus/synonyms/young_person.

  • boy
  • girl
  • juvenile
  • kid
  • pupil
  • student
  • teenager
  • youth
  • chick
  • cub
  • fledgling
  • junior
  • lad
  • lass
  • moppet
  • punk
  • pup
  • puppy
  • sapling
  • shaver
  • sonny
  • squirt
  • urchin
  • juvenile delinquent
  • little guy
  • little kid
  • small fry
  • snotnose kid
  • teenybopper
  • young adult
  • boy
  • chick
  • cub
  • fledgling
  • girl
  • junior
  • juvenile
  • juvenile delinquent
  • kid
  • lad
  • lass
  • pup
  • pupil
  • student
  • teenager

Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

On this page you’ll find 62 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to young person, such as: adolescent, junior, juvenile, minor, pubescent, and teenybopper.

SYNONYM OF THE DAY

OCTOBER 26, 1985

WORDS RELATED TO YOUNG PERSON

  • adolescent
  • junior
  • juvenile
  • minor
  • pubescent
  • teenybopper
  • young person
  • youngster
  • boy
  • chick
  • cub
  • fledgling
  • girl
  • junior
  • juvenile
  • juvenile delinquent
  • kid
  • lad
  • lass
  • little guy
  • little kid
  • moppet
  • punk
  • pup
  • pupil
  • puppy
  • sapling
  • shaver
  • small fry
  • snotnose kid
  • sonny
  • squirt
  • student
  • teenager
  • teenybopper
  • urchin
  • young adult
  • young person
  • youth
  • boy
  • chick
  • cub
  • fledgling
  • girl
  • junior
  • juvenile
  • juvenile delinquent
  • kid
  • lad
  • lass
  • pup
  • pupil
  • student
  • teenager
  • young person
  • boys
  • chicks
  • cubs
  • fledglings
  • girls
  • juniors
  • juvenile delinquents
  • juveniles
  • kids
  • lads
  • lasses
  • pupils
  • pups
  • students
  • teenagers
  • young persons
  • boys
  • chicks
  • cubs
  • fledglings
  • girls
  • juniors
  • juvenile delinquents
  • juveniles
  • kids
  • lads
  • lasses
  • pupils
  • pups
  • students
  • teenagers
  • young persons

Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

What is another word for young person?

53 synonyms found

Pronunciation:

[ jˈʌŋ pˈɜːsən], [ jˈʌŋ pˈɜːsən], [ j_ˈʌ_ŋ p_ˈɜː_s_ə_n]

Related words: what should a young person with a lot of money do, young people with lots of money, people who have lots of money, wealthy person, wealthy people, people with a lot of money, rich, wealthy friend

Related questions:

  • Is it normal for a young person to have lots of money?
  • Table of Contents

    • n.

      Other relevant words: (noun)

      • pubescent,
      • juvenile person,
      • teenager,
      • young people,
      • PUPS,
      • pup,
      • young adult,
      • juvenile,
      • juniors.

      spring chicken (noun)

      • spring chicken.

      young person (noun)

      • younker.

      youngster (noun)

      • sonny,
      • little kid,
      • Puppies,
      • teenyboppers,
      • sonnies,
      • shavers,
      • punk,
      • shaver,
      • puppy,
      • little kids,
      • snotnose kid,
      • urchin,
      • small fry,
      • squirt,
      • little guy,
      • Moppet.

      youngster/youth (noun)

      • cub,
      • pupil,
      • girl,
      • lad,
      • boy,
      • juvenile delinquent,
      • student,
      • kid,
      • chick,
      • lass.
    • Other synonyms:

      Other relevant words (noun):

      • hopeful,
      • stripling,
      • sapling,
      • slip,
      • teenybopper,
      • youth,
      • adolescent,
      • child,
      • baby,
      • youngster,
      • youngest,
      • junior,
      • fledgling,
      • infant,
      • sprig,
      • minor.

    How to use «Young person» in context?

    There is no definitive answer to when someone becomes a young person. Age is relative, and what may be considered a young age to one person may be considered an older age to another. Generally speaking, though, most people would consider people to be young when they are in their early 20s. Once someone reaches their mid-20s, they are generally considered to be in their late 20s or early 30s. There are, of course, exceptions to this rule.

    What is a better word for Young?

    What is another word for young?

    juvenile immature
    fledgling green
    growing infantile
    young at heart young-looking
    callow childish

    What is a young person called?

    General. Around the world, the English terms youth, adolescent, teenager, kid, and young person are interchanged, often meaning the same thing, but they are occasionally differentiated. Youth can be referred to as the time of life when one is young.

    What’s another word for youthful?

    What is another word for youthful?

    juvenile young
    boyish girlish
    immature childlike
    spry young-looking
    adolescent childish

    How do you describe youthful?

    Definition of youthful

    1. 1 : of, relating to, or characteristic of youth youthful inexperience.
    2. 2 : being young and not yet mature.
    3. 3 : marked by or possessing youth youthful dancers.
    4. 4 : having the vitality or freshness of youth : vigorous my youthful grandparents.

    What means youthful?

    adjective. characterized by youth; young. of, relating to, or befitting youth: youthful enthusiasm. having the appearance, freshness, vigor, etc., of youth: She is 60 but her optimism has kept her youthful. in an early period of existence; early in time.

    What is a youthful look?

    adjective. Having a young appearance. ‘I ask him how he manages to stay so youthful-looking’

    What is youthful exuberance?

    Youthful Exuberance can be defined as that stage in becoming adults of an age range (15-25years) where teenage boys and girls show signs of livelihood, enthusiasm, vigour, energy and possible rebellion.

    How do you spell delight?

    Etymology. An unetymological spelling, in imitation of words like light, might, etc.; the analogical modern spelling would be delite; from Middle English delite, from Old French deleiter, deliter, from Latin delectare (“to delight, please”), frequentative of delicere (“to allure”); see delectation and delicate.

    Is delighted a feeling?

    You can use the adjective delighted to describe being really pleased or happy with something. Delighted might be a slightly old-fashioned way to show excitement or enthusiasm, or maybe it’s a more refined way to express how you feel.

    What does delighting mean?

    1 : great pleasure or satisfaction : joy The baby clapped with delight. 2 : something that gives great pleasure Visiting with them was a delight. delight. verb. delighted; delighting.

    What is the meaning of charming?

    : extremely pleasing or delightful : entrancing a charming restaurant has such charming manners.

    What is the verb of remorse?

    remord. (obsolete, intransitive) To feel remorse. (obsolete, transitive) To excite to remorse; to rebuke.

    What is the base word for remorse?

    The noun remorse has a very vivid origin. It comes from the Latin roots re for “again” and mordere “to bite.” So, if you feel remorse, it means that your conscience is working on you, your past actions are biting you back, and making you feel very regretful.

    What type of word is remorse?

    noun. deep and painful regret for wrongdoing; compunction. Obsolete. pity; compassion.

    What is opposite of remorse?

    remorse. Antonyms: complacency, self-approval, self-congratulation. Synonyms: compunction, anguish, self-condemnation, penitence, sting of conscience.

    What is it called when you feel bad for someone?

    Sympathy is a feeling of pity or sense of compassion — it’s when you feel bad for someone else who’s going through something hard.

    What is a word for no remorse?

    without remorse; merciless; pitiless; relentless.

    What is the difference between guilt and remorse?

    Guilt is acknowledging a crime or a harmful action while remorse is regretting the actions and taking steps to undo damage. 2. Guilt tends to lead to destructive tendencies while remorse leads to constructive actions. 3.

    What is remorseful person?

    The adjective remorseful is good for describing someone who is really, really sorry — like a teenager who borrows his parents’ car without asking and drives it into a tree. Someone who feels remorseful has usually done something that he or she now feels guilty about.

    What is a good sentence for remorse?

    I suffered no remorse. She felt a sharp pang of remorse over the incident. She knew that the next day she would be full of remorse. She was filled with remorse for the crime.

    What is Isguilt?

    Guilt is a feeling people typically have after doing something wrong, intentionally or accidentally. A person’s sense of guilt usually relates to their moral code. Guilt isn’t necessarily bad.

    whippersnapper

    A whippersnapper is a “diminutive, insignificant, or presumptuous person,” and, if we needed proof that it was not a compliment but a term of reproach, here is the word used in a lengthy harangue by Edgar Allan Poe, from his story “Loss of Breath”:

    «Thou wretch! – thou vixen! – thou shrew!» said I to my wife on the morning after our wedding, «thou witch! – thou hag! – thou whipper-snapper! – thou sink of iniquity! – thou fiery-faced quintessence of all that is abominable! – thou – thou –»

    The speaker in the story is then, gratifyingly, bereft of breath and stops.

    Whippersnapper is usually used in a much milder way, as by an older person in order to emphasize the youth of the person being addressed. It seems to have come from an earlier word, snippersnapper, which was first used, with the same meaning, in the late 1500s. It may also have been influenced by whipster, a word used in much the same way by Shakespeare:

    I am not valiant neither, but every puny whipster gets my sword.
    Othello

    Whippersnapper’s popularity peaked in the 1930s, making it seem to us, despite its Renaissance origins, recognizable and oldy-timey.

    look at this moppet

    Moppet means “a young person” or “a child,” and is usually used in an endearing way. It comes from mop, an obsolete English word dating to the 1300s that meant both “a fool” and “a baby.” During the 1700s, it was used to mean “a young woman” or “damsel,” and, as an insulting term, “an effeminate man” or “a fop.” Those meanings have dropped from use. Today we know that this mop is unrelated to the mop that means “a tool for cleaning floors,” but Samuel Johnson, in his 1755 Dictionary, seemed to combine mop and puppet, with his definition:

    Moppet, a puppet made of rags, as a mop is made.

    Moppet is apparently unrelated to Muppet, which Jim Henson insisted wasn’t a combination of “marionette” and “puppet,” but rather a fun word that he made up.

    whiffet

    Whiffet means “a small, young, or unimportant person,” but the undeniable cuteness of the word seems to have kept it from becoming a common term of reproach. Indeed, the word’s other meaning seems to confirm its cuddly sound: “a small dog,” used mostly in the 19th century.

    Whiffet was used in relaxed and informal writing, such as this breezy passage from an early magazine movie review:

    Particularly is this true in the case of William Haines. This cinemactor invariably plays the obnoxious, precocious whiffet who upsets plans, causes heartaches by his wilfulness.
    —“The New Pictures,” Time Magazine, 10 October 1928

    Whiffet seems to have developed from whippet, the name of a dog breed.

    When used to refer to people, the Oxford English Dictionary records both whiffler and whifling as older synonyms of whiffet.

    younker

    Younker comes from the Dutch word that means “young nobleman,” jonker. If younker looks a bit like the English word younger, there’s a good reason: younker’s root, the Dutch word jon, is an etymological cousin of young. Another cousin is the German borrowing Junker (pronounced YUN-kur), used in English to mean either “a young German noble” or “a member of the Prussian landed aristocracy.” Both the Dutch and German words are compounds of a word meaning “young” and a word meaning “lord.”

    In English, younker has been used to mean “a young man,” “youngster,” “child,” and, more specifically, “a junior seaman on board ship” (which is similar to one definition of youngster: “a midshipman who has served less than four years”).

    Younker is a word that was used during the 19th century by such writers as James Fenimore Cooper, Charles Dickens, and Benjamin Disraeli, but its use has fallen off sharply since 1900.

    gremmie

    Surfing’s first wave of popularity in the 1950s led to some novel lingo like wipe out and hang five. A term used to describe a young or inexperienced surfer, gremmie, developed around 1960 as a diminutive of gremlin. Gremlin began as a name used by RAF pilots in the 1920s for an unimportant person, and was then applied as the imaginary cause of mechanical problems (as in “a gremlin in the works”). For surfers, a gremmie can also mean either a young surfer who does not respect acknowledged codes of behavior in the water or a young person who hangs around at the beach but does not surf.

    Gremmie saw a peak of popularity in the late 1960s, and its use in print has subsequently dropped sharply since the 1980s.

    bantling

    Bantling is a word for “a very young child” or “infant” that has a polished literary pedigree, having been used by Lord Byron, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Alfred, Lord Tennyson. The word could have developed from the German bänkling (“bastard”) from Bank, meaning “bench”—a reflection of the notion that such a child that was conceived on a bench of some sort and not in the marriage bed. It also may have developed from band meaning “swathe,” a reference to a baby’s swaddling clothes.

    ephebe

    Ephebe, meaning “a young man,” is a variant of ephebus, “a youth of ancient Greece” or, more specifically, “an Athenian 18 or 19 years old training for full citizenship.” This word combines Greek elements: the prefix epi- meaning “on” or “at” and hēbē, meaning “early manhood” or “youth.” Unsurprisingly, ephebe is most often used in discussions of Ancient Greece, but it has been used to refer to young men who are finding their way as artists or poets.

    lass

    Lass is a word redolent with the color of Scottish, Irish varieties of English as well as the dialects of the north of England. It’s been part of English since the 1300s, and is still in active use meaning both “a young woman” and “sweetheart.” A less frequent Scottish use in the past meant “maidservant.”

    Lass may have its roots in the Old Norse word for “unmarried,” but is more likely derived from a word meaning “rag,” las, from Old Danish, Old Norwegian, or Old Swedish.

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