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  1. ChatGPT 不再限制用户制作成人内容,此举何意? - 知乎

    2月13日消息,OpenAI发布了其《模型规范》的扩展版本,内容涵盖了AI模型如何处理争议性话题、用户定制化…

  2. Referring to adult-age sons and daughters as children

    Dec 21, 2012 · "adult children" is sometimes used in contexts where age is important, such as a form requiring someone to list all children under 18 and all adult children living with them. And …

  3. Adult children? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Apr 18, 2017 · "Adult children" comes from "adult children of alcoholics", but now has broader reference to adults who were abused emotionally, physically or sexually in childhood.

  4. What is the word for an adult who is not mature?

    May 11, 2014 · What term can be used for an adult, especially a man, who is in his forties and still behaves like a teenager, shunning responsibilities typical of mature people, preferring to enjoy …

  5. 为什么He acted as if he were an adult用的是were? - 知乎

    Nov 5, 2022 · 为什么He acted as if he were an adult用的是were? 虚拟语气不是往以前倒推一个时间点吗,为什么不用had been,而是were啊,这跟acted不是一个时态吗 显示全部 关注者 8

  6. 城市论坛 - 天府社区

    Dec 24, 2025 · 天府社区的城市论坛综合版块,提供多样化的城市生活交流与讨论平台。

  7. Specific word for "grown-up children"? [duplicate]

    Mar 5, 2014 · Is there a specific word for adult offspring? If all of your "children" are now in their adulthood, is there a specific word to refer to them?

  8. Trying to understand the nuances between ox, steer and bullock

    Dec 6, 2018 · American English: an adult animal of the cattle family, esp. a male that has had its sexual organs removed. (here "castrated" is qualified with "especially") Further, Wikipedia …

  9. Is post-hyphenation necessary in "I am a child and adult …

    Mar 12, 2023 · 4 Based on usage, hyphenation doesn't seem necessary. According to Google, "a child and adult psychologist" seems to be the most idiomatic expression referring to a …

  10. Where in the U.S. do people change the stress of umbrella, adult …

    I think that I change the stress in "adult" depending on part of speech—it's always the second syllable for the noun (and verb), but often first syllable for the adjective.