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Definition of foster verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

foster

verb
 
/ˈfɒstə(r)/
 
/ˈfɑːstər/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they foster
 
/ˈfɒstə(r)/
 
/ˈfɑːstər/
he / she / it fosters
 
/ˈfɒstəz/
 
/ˈfɑːstərz/
past simple fostered
 
/ˈfɒstəd/
 
/ˈfɑːstərd/
past participle fostered
 
/ˈfɒstəd/
 
/ˈfɑːstərd/
-ing form fostering
 
/ˈfɒstərɪŋ/
 
/ˈfɑːstərɪŋ/
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  1. [transitive] foster something to encourage something to develop synonym encourage, promote
    • The club's aim is to foster better relations within the community.
    Extra Examples
    • The school has carefully fostered its progressive image.
    • Such organizations need to foster innovation.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • carefully
    • deliberately
    verb + foster
    • help (to)
    • be designed to
    See full entry
  2. [transitive, intransitive] foster (somebody) (especially British English) to take another person’s child into your home for a period of time, without becoming his or her legal parents
    • They have fostered over 60 children during the past ten years.
    • We couldn't adopt a child, so we decided to foster.
    Collocations ChildrenChildrenHaving a baby/​child
    • want a baby/​a child/​kids
    • start a family
    • conceive/​be expecting/​be going to have a baby/​child
    • miss your period
    • become/​get/​be/​find out that you are pregnant
    • have a baby/​a child/​kids/​a son/​a daughter/​twins/​a family
    • have a normal/​a difficult/​an unwanted pregnancy; an easy/​a difficult/​a home birth
    • be in/​go into/​induce labour (especially US English) labor
    • have/​suffer/​cause a miscarriage
    • give birth to a child/​baby/​daughter/​son/​twins
    Parenting
    • bring up/ (especially North American English) raise a child/​family
    • care for/ (especially British English) look after a baby/​child/​kid
    • change (British English) a nappy/(North American English) a diaper/​a baby
    • feed/​breastfeed/​bottle-feed a baby
    • be entitled to/​go on maternity/​paternity leave
    • go back/​return to work after maternity leave
    • need/​find/​get a babysitter/​good quality affordable childcare
    • balance/​combine work and childcare/​child-rearing/​family life
    • educate/​teach/​home-school a child/​kid
    • punish/​discipline/​spoil a child/​kid
    • adopt a baby/​child/​kid
    • offer a baby for/​put a baby up for adoption
    • (especially British English) foster a child/​kid
    • be placed with/​be raised by foster parents
    compare adoptTopics Life stagesc1, Family and relationshipsc1
  3. Word OriginOld English fōstrian ‘feed, nourish’, from fōster ‘food, nourishment’, of Germanic origin; related to food. The sense ‘bring up another's (originally also one's own) child’ dates from Middle English.
See foster in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee foster in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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