It's that big juggle that many of my readers know, with my life depending on fantastic nannies. |
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The real expat deal means astronomical salaries, a large pad in Azabu Juban, nannies to look after their two kids, etc. |
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There was no shortage of cash to employ nannies or to send the children to the most expensive private schools. |
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Men have a limited role in child-rearing, which is primarily the responsibility of the mother and female relatives or nannies. |
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Although father had employed governesses and nannies for our care during the time he was away, Olga took the most care of us. |
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The nannies and carers are not allowed to kiss or cuddle the children and they are not permitted to play with other kids. |
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The majority don't work but, however rich they may be, neither do they employ childminders or nannies. |
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Apparently there were stories about him telling the nannies, you know, and the nurses and things, how to bathe the children and so forth. |
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More mild mannered than full-sized goats, these little billies and nannies have become the latest must-have pets for Christmas. |
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So obviously it is better for the economy that women work and employ maids or nannies. |
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Will nannies and childminders simply relay instructions to our kids over the phone? |
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In place at present is a truly hopeless patchwork of home carers, minders, state nurseries, private nurseries, nannies and the like. |
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Those gowns are not made for elderly nannies or maids-of-all-work, but for young ladies. |
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Once upon a time, nannies were the carers and the copers for middle-class families whose parents had opted out. |
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Never in the history of nannies has there been a more fly nanny than Julie Andrews. |
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She'd tossed back drinks and popped pills all of his childhood, leaving him and his brothers in care of nannies, so what was she doing now? |
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They are patient nannies for children, and devoted, loving companions for adults. |
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Every woman boss depends on au pairs, nannies, cleaners, cooks and women who do the ironing. |
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Small children ran about with kites or pet dogs, their nannies close behind. |
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And nannies, in-laws and other parents can support the cause by not breaking the rules. |
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The Family Card Option can also be used with non-family members, for example to provide funds to caregivers or nannies. |
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Like most nannies, though, the virtual babysitter will work for only eight hours or so at a stretch. |
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Neither women nor men ought not be made to feel guilty if they outsource this work to daycare, nannies, or assisted-living facilities. |
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His father was a real-estate tycoon who owned several Manhattan skyscrapers, and Coupey's early childhood was one of nannies and private schools. |
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Born in west London in 1923, Howard remembers long walks in Kensington Gardens with nannies who gathered with Marie biscuits and Thermos flasks of Bovril. |
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Critics from both the right and the left accuse middle-class women of neglecting their children and exploiting the immigrant women they employ as nannies and housekeepers. |
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With both parents working, many children are today cared for in a shared arrangement between the parents and others, such as nurseries, nannies, and child-minders. |
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There have been wet nurses and nannies for generations, for centuries. |
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Particularly with kids: it helps with their socialisation, and it certainly helps with child-minding, because you don't have to rely on nannies. |
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It includes nannies, private sitters, friends or relatives and can take place in either the parents' home or the provider's home. |
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It is particularly the pregnant and milking nannies that need extra feeding. |
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We must encourage people to use the technology and stop being their nannies. |
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Maids, nannies and carers help us to educate our children, to take care of the elderly or to go to work. |
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Greater driver input is accomplished via the electronic manual-mode function and the ability to deactivate the control nannies at lower speeds. |
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With all these nannies, the driving experience can feel a bit too conservative at times, so it's a good thing that you can disable them. |
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Probably not by advertising to persuade people to employ nannies or tutors! |
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Without iodine nannies will give birth to weak, deformed or even stillborn kids. |
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Countries receiving housekeepers, nannies and other domestic workers from abroad must act to protect their human rights. |
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Nutrition nannies scorn hot dogs, but there are plenty of happy eaters who adore them. |
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Yes, Ms. Donatacci is going to have to downsize, and perhaps get rid of some of those nannies. |
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I cut and paste on my Sina Twitter account, readers retweet, and the nannies erase, all of us operating at a frantic pace. |
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It is a surrealistic story involving a tense relationship between lovers, nannies pushing baby carriages, and starlets parading around in a snake pit of Hollywood promises. |
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This includes approximately 75,000 workers who serve the rich and very rich in such jobs as limousine drivers, nannies, housekeepers, waiters and bellhops. |
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The number one cost is childcare, which can run into thousands, be it nurseries, nannies, child minders, au pairs, after school clubs or holiday play schemes. |
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This would raise the profile of nannies in society and afford them a status on a par with other carers, such as childminders, teachers and nurses. |
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Most of them had been brought up by fearsome women of authority: nannies, matrons, distant and detached mothers, whom one did not challenge or disobey. |
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It is generally acknowledged that workers in debt bondage are primarily illegal migrant agricultural workers, maids, nannies or hideously exploited people in small industries in the Third World. |
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Caritas is launching a campaign to urge employers and governments to protect migrants who work in people's homes as maids, nannies and carers from exploitation. |
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Zimbabwean nannies have also become very popular in South Africa. President Robert Mugabe was once praised for spending much money and attention on the country's education. |
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Mr. Speaker, I want to do a quick history in four minutes on how the Canadian government has been soft on crime against immigrants, soft on crime against migrants and soft on crime against nannies. |
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They tend to be care workers, nannies and recent immigrants. |
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Canada aggressively recruits nannies from the Philippines. |
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Demand for British nannies abroad is rising fast, a major childcare agency said yesterday. |
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The biggest reason parents don't pay nannies over the table is because of the extra cost. |
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He was talking about one of his senior people, a woman who had recently had her first baby and who was back to working fifteen-hour days within a couple of months, thanks to the help of two full-time nannies. |
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According to Mayhew, each of the agency's nannies are every bit as wonderful as Walt Disney's Mary Poppins. |
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Annex H will also ensure that the temporary reduced rates for labour-intensive services are made permanent for a number of services, such as nannies, nursing care for the elderly or domestic cleaners. |
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An apparent boom in the number of UK nannies has not yet reached Wales according to one of the nation's largest agencies. |
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In fact, distinguishing between billies and nannies isn't necessarily a sure thing. |
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Then, during three days, I was amazed to see nannies with kids attack and chase off large billies. |
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Asquith bought a house in Surrey, and hired nannies and other domestic staff. |
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And the National Childminding Association says childminders are safer than nannies or au pairs. |
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Not only in Germany do both already start in the pre-school years: In New York's upper-classes, for example, nannies who speak fluent Mandarin are the latest trend. |
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Three girls, completely unalike with seemingly nothing in common, come to be friends thanks to the common bond of being nannies. |
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Some of the work is more commentary, jokiness, and the people I know who have nannies like it. |
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For example, in some countries nannies earn less than car mechanics, supermarket cashiers less than warehouse workers, nurses less than the police. |
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And a staggering 70 per cent of mums who employ nannies admit they have not carried out proper background checks. |
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It also recommended extending subsidies to in-home care such as nannies. |
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Ros Cornish, the national president of Early Childhood Australia, said the government should implement minimum training standards for nannies, but warned that increased regulation could result in higher prices. |
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The deputy Greens leader, Adam Bandt, said the party was not sold on the idea of funding nannies, but pledged to look at the report more closely before saying if it would support the recommendations. |
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Part of their remit was to provide Ayahs to people who wanted nannies. |
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Restless children will also be shown how to make sock puppets and paper animals by the specially trained nannies, who will wear bright orange aprons. |
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These days, most nannies aren't a darn thing like Mary Poppins. |
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Unlike registered childminders, nannies are not currently regulated, but from next year the Government is introducing a voluntary approval scheme for nannies in England. |
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Health activists, nutrition nannies, medical paternalists, and just plain old quacks regularly conjure up menaces that are supposedly damaging the health of Americans. |
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Wouldn't grow straight if you put a splint on 'er. She liked the loopholes in things. The chinks, the crooks and nannies... liked to find healthy little plantlets to choke! |
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