Cradles

/ˈkreɪdəlz/ noun

Definition

Small beds for infants, typically with rockers or the ability to swing gently. Also refers to places of origin or early development of something.

Etymology

From Old English 'cradol', related to Old High German 'kratto' meaning 'basket'. The metaphorical sense of 'birthplace' or 'origin' developed from the literal infant bed meaning by the 14th century.

Kelly Says

The gentle rocking motion that soothes babies became a metaphor for nurturing anything in its early stages - we speak of the 'cradle of civilization' because cultures, like infants, need gentle protection while they develop their strength.

Translations

DEDeutsch
Wiegen
vee-geh-n
ESEspañol
cunas
koo-nahs
FRFrançais
berceaux
ber-soh
ITItaliano
culle
koo-leh
JA日本語
ゆりかご
yuri-kago
KO한국어
요람들
yoh-rahm-deul
PTPortuguês
berços
ber-soh-s
ZH中文
摇篮
yáo lán

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Cradle is historically feminized through motherhood imagery; 'cradle of civilization' uses maternal metaphor to describe creation/origins, encoding women as nurturers rather than innovators.

Inclusive Usage

Use descriptively without maternal subtext. Specify 'support structure' or 'foundational system' if clarity helps.

Inclusive Alternatives

["foundation","base","support structure","origins"]

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.