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  1. Jun 2, 2024 · mollycoddle (third-person singular simple present mollycoddles, present participle mollycoddling, simple past and past participle mollycoddled) ( transitive) To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper .

  2. coddle [sb] ⇒ vtr (pamper, pander to [sb]) mimar a vtr + prep : consentir a vtr + prep (MX, HO) apapachar a vtr + prep : Max's mother coddled him, and he's never had to face criticism in his life. La madre siempre mimó a Max y él nunca tuvo que enfrentarse a las críticas en su vida. coddle [sth] ⇒ vtr (food, esp. eggs: boil gently)

  3. Dec 21, 2017 · 4) Anxiety. Coddling your kids can even lead to the development of certain mental illnesses, such as anxiety. It’s understandable for a parent to hesitate loosening the leash… freeing their child to make their own decisions, to learn from their own mistakes—but doing so is essential to a child’s development.

  4. Define coddling. coddling synonyms, coddling pronunciation, coddling translation, ... I will have coddled: you will have coddled: he/she/it will have coddled:

  5. The earliest known use of the verb coddle is in the early 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for coddle is from 1615, in a text by Thomas Overbury, courtier and author, et al. Perhaps (i) a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Or perhaps (ii) formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: caudle v.1; caudle n.

  6. from The Century Dictionary. To make effeminate by pampering; make much of; treat tenderly as an invalid; humor; pamper. To boil gently; seethe; stew, as fruit. noun An over-indulged, pampered being; a person or animal made weak or effeminate by tender treatment. In tobacco manufacturing, to injure by fermentation.

  7. How to use coddle in a sentence. to cook (something, such as eggs) in liquid slowly and gently just below the boiling point ... 1651, in the meaning defined at sense 2.