youths in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for youths in the English»Spanish Dictionary (Go to Spanish»English)

youth <pl youths [juːðz]> [Am juθ, Brit juːθ] N

youth hosteling, youth hostelling Brit N

youth hosteler, youth hosteller Brit N

I.youth hostel [Am ˈjuθ ˌhɑstl, Brit] N

youth-hostel <youth-hosteling youth-hosteled Am youth-hostelling youth-hostelled Brit >:

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Translations for youths in the Spanish»English Dictionary (Go to English»Spanish)

youths in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for youths in the English»Spanish Dictionary (Go to Spanish»English)

Your search term in other parts of the dictionary

Translations for youths in the Spanish»English Dictionary (Go to English»Spanish)

youths Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The gab boys of the title - so called because of their gabardine trousers - are the sharply dressed youths who hang about the village and are considered delinquent by their elders.
en.wikipedia.org
These unruly youths became known as rude boys.
en.wikipedia.org
While youths can flout selected restrictions, there are almost no instances in which unmarried people move in together.
en.wikipedia.org
Pretty soon, youths adopted the hip hop culture as their own, and infused it with international flavors.
en.wikipedia.org
You've got gangs of youths playing at being gangsters who have turned the area into a no-go zone.
www.gatestoneinstitute.org
As of last week, 521,815 youths had received deferrals, with the agency handling more than 2,000 applications a day.
www.nationalreview.com
Youths are made to go through a three-phase training plan comprising life skills and orientation course, vocational skills training, and business entrepreneurship training.
thenationonlineng.net
Such gangs were common; around 250,000 youths traveled the country by hopping trains or hitchhiking in search of better economic circumstances in the early 1930s.
en.wikipedia.org
This political deficiency has brought to fruition a population of uneducated, unskilled, unemployable and unattached youths.
jamaica-gleaner.com
The source said the youths stole keys and a swipe card from a guard, before a "code white" (a riot) was called.
www.theage.com.au

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