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offspring

[awf-spring, of-] / ˈɔfˌsprɪŋ, ˈɒf- /


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.

Though he didn’t linger in the Golden State for long, his offspring later returned and formed California’s first modern pack in 2015.

From Los Angeles Times • May 16, 2026

The helpers in a group are often offspring from earlier years who stayed with their parents after growing up.

From Slate • May 10, 2026

"Because the two species were capable of producing offspring together, their interactions were likely complex, involving competition, occasional interbreeding and other subtle population dynamics."

From Science Daily • Apr. 28, 2026

Peter Nowell, a pathologist, argued in 1976 that cancers arise from a single mutant cell and then evolve, as offspring acquire new mutations and compete for dominance—a prediction that single-cell sequencing has dramatically confirmed.

From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 20, 2026

“The one up on the roof. Scrappy. But we will want to mate it if we can get our hands on a male. And any offspring will be ours; that has to be absolutely understood.”

From "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" by Philip K. Dick




Vocabulary lists containing offspring


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