son
noun /sʌn/
  /sʌn/
Idioms - [countable] a person’s male child
- their four-year-old son
 - my teenage/eldest son
 - her young/baby son
 - We have two sons and a daughter.
 - They have three grown-up sons.
 - In January 1816 she gave birth to a son, William.
 - She is survived by a son, Christopher.
 - the birth/death of a son
 - son of somebody He's the son of an Oxford professor.
 - He was like a son to me.
 - Maine & Sons, Grocers (= the name of a company on a sign)
 
Collocations ChildrenChildrenHaving a baby/child- want a baby/a child/kids
 - start a family
 - conceive/be expecting/be going to have a baby/child
 - miss your period
 - become/get/be/find out that you are pregnant
 - have a baby/a child/kids/a son/a daughter/twins/a family
 - have a normal/a difficult/an unwanted pregnancy; an easy/a difficult/a home birth
 - be in/go into/induce labour (especially US English) labor
 - have/suffer/cause a miscarriage
 - give birth to a child/baby/daughter/son/twins
 
- bring up/ (especially North American English) raise a child/family
 - care for/ (especially British English) look after a baby/child/kid
 - change (British English) a nappy/(North American English) a diaper/a baby
 - feed/breastfeed/bottle-feed a baby
 - be entitled to/go on maternity/paternity leave
 - go back/return to work after maternity leave
 - need/find/get a babysitter/good quality affordable childcare
 - balance/combine work and childcare/child-rearing/family life
 - educate/teach/home-school a child/kid
 - punish/discipline/spoil a child/kid
 - adopt a baby/child/kid
 - offer a baby for/put a baby up for adoption
 - (especially British English) foster a child/kid
 - be placed with/be raised by foster parents
 
Homophones son | sunson sun/sʌn//sʌn/- son noun
- Their youngest son is still living at home.
 
 - sun noun
- Let's go for a picnic while the sun is shining!
 
 
Extra ExamplesTopics Family and relationshipsa1- Living alone and trying to bring up a young son is no easy task.
 - The queen bore him four fine sons.
 - They welcomed me like a long-lost son.
 - an illegitimate son of Louis XV
 - Our oldest son is playing football.
 - his son from a previous marriage
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- baby
 - newborn
 - infant
 - …
 
- have
 - bear
 - give birth to
 - …
 
- grow up
 
 - [singular] (informal) a friendly form of address that is used by an older man to a young man or boy
- Well, son, how can I help you?
 
 - [countable] (literary) a man who belongs to a particular place or country, etc.
- one of France’s most famous sons
 - a native son of Philadelphia
 
 - my son[countable] (formal) used by a priest to address a boy or man
 - the Son[singular] Jesus Christ as the second member of the Trinity
- the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit
 
 
Word OriginOld English sunu, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zoon and German Sohn, from an Indo-European root shared by Greek huios.
Idioms 
somebody’s favourite son 
- a performer, politician, sports player, etc., who is popular where they were born
 - (in the US) a candidate for president who is supported by his or her own state in the first part of a campaign                                     
 
from father to son 
- from one generation of a family to the next
 
like father, like son 
- (saying) used to say that a son’s character or behaviour is similar to that of his father
 
the/a prodigal (son) 
- a person who leaves home and wastes their money and time on a life of pleasure, but who later is sorry about this and returns home