empty nest
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From birds whose offspring leave the nest when they reach maturity.
Noun
[edit]empty nest (plural empty nests)
- A home or a family where the children have grown up and moved away.
- 2011, Celia Dodd, The Empty Nest: Your Changing Family, Your New Direction[1], Hachette UK, →ISBN:
- One woman with a full-on and demanding career e-mailed me to say ‘This empty nest thing is no joke. I didn't realise it would hit me so hard. It is day three of my daughter being gone and I have to resist the urge to weep every time I go past her room.’
- 2025 August 10, Don Riddell, “Now that my kids are off to college, what’s this empty nester dad to do?”, in CNN[3]:
- As Dodd wrote in ‘The Empty Nest,’ “To me, it was glaringly obvious that parting from a child who has been the centre of your life for twenty-odd years is a really big deal. Yet while new parents are bombarded with advice, empty nest parents are left to muddle through what is arguably the most challenging phase of parenting.”
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see empty, nest.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]home or family where the children have moved away
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