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  1. 1 sie 2018 · Sometime around the mid-15th century, the English stopped calling these small mammals covered in bristles "urchins" and decided that they looked like piglets that typically lived in shrubs. According to Etymonline, the term hedgehog is a compound word formed by hedge (n.) and hog (n.)

  2. Homeless youth are often called street kids, or urchins; the definition of street children is contested, but many practitioners and policymakers use UNICEF's concept of boys and girls, aged under 18 years, for whom "the street" (including unoccupied dwellings and wasteland) has become home and/or their source of livelihood, and who are ...

  3. 15 paź 2014 · What would young children (aged around 5-ish) have called their parents circa 1920's England? Were there specific terms of endearment, or would it just be "mother" and "father"? I'm particularly thinking of the upper classes, but all answers are appreciated.

  4. I was wondering why "sea urchins" are so called, and what the connection with destitute children was. The answer: "Urchin" used to mean "hedgehog", and was transferred to children because of their ragged appearance.

  5. This led me to research why "street children" are called "urchins". It seems that there used to be mythical, mischievous elves that turned themselves into hedgehogs (urchins, at the time). Mischievous children started being called "urchins" after those mythical elves.

  6. Street Arabs and Street Urchins. An alarming 1849 report by New York City police chief George Matsell raised the specter of over ten thousand "vagrant, idle and vicious children of both sexes" roaming the city streets, begging, stealing, or making their way as prostitutes. That same year, British journalist and social critic Henry Mayhew ...

  7. 20 mar 2017 · An Urchin is a young boy or girl, especially poorly or raggedly dressed. A Sprog is a youngster, child, a baby, from the word ‘sprag’ meaning a slip or cutting from a plant. Guttersnipe, is a street urchin, a gatherer of refuse from the street gutters.

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