View example sentences and word forms for Breastmilk.
Breastmilk
Breastmilk meaning
Alternative spelling of breast milk.
Example sentences (17)
At birth, breastmilk is also known as colostrum.
Australian Breastfeeding Association, breastmilk from another mum is the 'next best option' when extra milk is needed.
Breastmilk supplies infants with balanced and protective food to guard against infections, which are even more common during emergencies and crises.
Midwives and medical professionals call breastmilk “liquid gold” because it provides the ideal balance of fat, sugar, water and protein needed for a baby’s growth and development.
The season ramps up the weirdness with the growing implication that Homelander's got a one-sided beef with Stillwell's baby, and the reveal that she already knows about his breastmilk/mommy fixation and is using it her advantage.
The women were not really being milked and oat milk was used instead of breastmilk.
You have breasts, but who will you feed breastmilk to?" she asks.
If I wanted to eat, wash the night’s sweat, breastmilk and mustard baby shit off my body and have something for lunch, then I had to get it all sorted while there was someone else on hand to hold, rock, soothe, bounce or wind our baby.
Through a series of parenting and breastfeeding online forums, she somehow managed to organise other women to donate their breastmilk when hers was too toxic to use due to her cancer treatment.
Working mothers, especially, face nearly insurmountable barriers when it comes to feeding their babies breastmilk.
Tabitha, from Carlsbad, California, estimates she produces around 90 ounces of breastmilk daily and has so far donated approximately 15,000 ounces in total.
Adequate supply, but not excess vitamin A, is especially important for pregnant and breastfeeding women for normal fetal development and in breastmilk.
Early weaning from breastmilk can also increase the risk of vitamin A deficiency.
He compared the behaviour of wild animals and pointed out how none of them denied their newborns their breastmilk.
Infants may still be breastfed to provide all of the benefits of breastmilk, but the quantity must also be monitored and supplementation for missing nutrients will be required.
Other alternatives include feeding breastmilk or formula with a cup, spoon, feeding syringe, or nursing supplementer.
Viral particles have also been found in saliva and breastmilk.