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- Q1741939 subject Q7163968.
- Q1741939 abstract "A nursery is usually, in American connotations, a bedroom within a house or other dwelling set aside for an infant or toddler. A typical nursery would contain a crib (or similar type of bed), a table or platform for the purpose of changing diapers (also known as a changing table), as well as various items required for the care of the child (such as baby powder and medicine). A nursery is generally designated for the smallest bedroom in the house, as a baby requires very little space until at least walking age; the premise being that the room is used almost exclusively for sleep. However, the room in many cases could remain the bedroom of the child well into his or her teenage years, or until a younger sibling is born, and the parents decide to move the older child into another larger bedroom, if one should be available.In Victorian and Edwardian times, for the wealthy and mid-tier classes, a nursery was a suite of rooms at the top of a house, including the night nursery, where the children slept, and a day nursery, where they ate and played, or a combination thereof. The nursery suite would include some bathroom facilities and possibly a small kitchen. The nurse (nanny) and nursemaid (assistant) slept in the suite too, to be within earshot of the sleeping children. The schoolroom might also be adjacent, but the governess, whose job it was to teach the children, would not be part of the nursery; she would have her own bedroom, possibly in another wing. Fictional portrayals of nurseries abound, for example in the writings of Kipling and E. Nesbit; perhaps the most famous nursery is that in Mary Poppins, or the nursery in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan and the nursery in Jim Henson's Muppet Babies.".
- Q1741939 thumbnail Baby_nursery_room.jpg?width=300.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q107190.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q11190.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q131774.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q1340307.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q1540278.
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- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q187359.
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- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q193837.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q231708.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q34743.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q3947.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q412770.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q4838459.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q502263.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q621114.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q7070221.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q7163968.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q81796.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q858705.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q936969.
- Q1741939 wikiPageWikiLink Q998.
- Q1741939 type Thing.
- Q1741939 comment "A nursery is usually, in American connotations, a bedroom within a house or other dwelling set aside for an infant or toddler. A typical nursery would contain a crib (or similar type of bed), a table or platform for the purpose of changing diapers (also known as a changing table), as well as various items required for the care of the child (such as baby powder and medicine).".
- Q1741939 label "Nursery (room)".
- Q1741939 depiction Baby_nursery_room.jpg.