middle-child syndrome

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English

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Noun

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middle-child syndrome (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of middle child syndrome.
    • 1975 January 15, Scrabble For Two [pseudonym], “[Confidential chat] New baby was charm”, in The Boston Globe, volume 207, number 15, Boston, Mass.: Globe Newspaper Co., →ISSN, page 34:
      I, too, was expecting my third child and was concerned about the “middle-child syndrome.” And all the things I had read and heard about happened as soon as I brought the baby home. Plus other symptoms developed as time went on. For three years, we had a typical middle child even though we tried to make him feel important.
    • 1993 March 8, Jerry Adler with Ray Sawhill, “As Groundhog Has His Day: Bill Murray, making it on a sneer and a shoeshine”, in Newsweek, →ISSN, page 53, column 2:
      As the fifth of nine children, growing up in a comfortable Chicago suburb, he may just be suffering from the world’s worst case of middle-child syndrome.
    • 2016, Jessi Klein, “All the Cakes”, in You’ll Grow Out of It, London: Two Roads, →ISBN, page 41:
      I have middle-child syndrome and generally bounce around rooms like a Labrador retriever trying to make sure everyone is okay.