babysit
See also: baby-sit
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Back-formation from babysitter.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbeɪ.bi.sɪt/
Audio (US) (file)
Verb
babysit (third-person singular simple present babysits, present participle babysitting, simple past and past participle babysat)
- (transitive, intransitive) To watch or tend someone else's child for a period of time, often for money.
- My daughter is babysitting for the Morgans at number ten, who are going out on a date night.
- We need someone to babysit our children while we go to the theater.
- (transitive, informal) To watch or tend a thing or process without normally intervening in it, e.g. as a precaution should an emergency happen.
- The reaction takes several hours, so we leave a graduate student to babysit it.
- (transitive, informal) To watch or attend anything or anyone more closely than ought to be needed; to have to help or coax too much.
- Synonym: (partial) coddle
- He left me to babysit the new guy while he got some work done.
- 2016, Christopher Vasey, Nazi Intelligence Operations in Non-Occupied Territories, page 175:
- It was observed by the FBI personnel assigned to “babysit” agent Tricycle that his egregiously excessive spending was causing unwanted attention […]
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
to watch or tend someone else's child for a period of time, often for money
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to watch or attend anything or anyone unnecessarily closely
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Translations to be checked
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Danish
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