Pronunciation: /ə beɪb ɪn ɑːrmz/
noun a young child or baby
A1 The mother held her baby as a babe in arms.
A2 The young couple walked through the park with their babe in arms.
B1 The nanny carefully carried the babe in arms while the parents were away.
B2 The celebrity was photographed with her babe in arms while out shopping.
C1 The politician made a public appearance with a babe in arms to appeal to voters.
C2 The artist's latest painting depicted a mother cradling a babe in arms.
preposition a word governing, and usually preceding, a noun or pronoun and expressing a relation to another word or element in the clause
A1 She walked through the park with a babe in arms.
A2 The mother carried her baby like a babe in arms.
B1 The nanny skillfully juggled two toddlers and a babe in arms.
B2 The soldier cradled the injured child like a babe in arms as they made their way to safety.
C1 The famous actress was photographed on the red carpet with her newborn daughter as a babe in arms.
C2 The politician's wife gracefully held their infant son like a babe in arms during the press conference.
formal The young mother held her babe in arms as she walked through the park.
informal She looked so cute with her babe in arms, didn't she?
slang I saw a dude with a babe in arms at the mall yesterday.
figurative The new project was like a babe in arms for the inexperienced team, they had no idea how to handle it.
was a babe in arms
babes in arms
more of a babe in arms
most of a babe in arms
is a babe in arms
will be a babe in arms
has been a babe in arms
is being a babe in arms
a babe in arms
a babe in arms
to be a babe in arms
being a babe in arms
a babe in arms