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leading strings

American  
[lee-ding] / ˈli dɪŋ /

plural noun

  1. strings for leading and supporting a child learning to walk.

  2. excessively restraining guidance.

    His parents tried to keep him in leading strings, but he finally married and moved away.


Etymology

Origin of leading strings

First recorded in 1670–80

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Right or wrong, Britain is not responsible for it, and Mr. Wallace's picture of the United States in leading strings is quite fanciful.

From Time Magazine Archive

I am surrounded, as it were, by barriers; hemmed in, bound up, kept in leading strings.

From The Light of Scarthey by Castle, Egerton

It is but now, that, unconsciously, mankind is beginning to emerge from the leading strings of its infancy, which became an iron bondage to its prolonged childhood.

From The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilizations by Nuttall, Zelia

"People accustomed to think out of leading strings will be glad to read it."

From The Marquis of Pe?alta (Marta y Mar?a) A Realistic Social Novel by Palacio Vald?s, Armando

There will be the disloyal deeds that made us a constant source of care and wonderment to the angels who watched us, and the cowardice that kept us in leading strings to conformity.

From Rosemary and Rue by Amber

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