"Studies show that children adopt their parents' eating habits starting early in life," Johnson says.
Already his children were learning Hebrew and adopting kibbutz ways.
Early in the film, the children adopt a dog after it is wounded by sniper fire.
In the Imperial period, however, children might sometimes make their mother's family name part of theirs, or even adopt it instead.
These children usually adopt a normal walking pattern as they grow older.
It is a skepticism that her children have adopted as well.
The most recent data, from 1992, show 127,441 children adopted that year, a slight increase from 118,000 five years earlier.
As stated previously, children will often adopt their parents' ideological values.
Later, the children have adopted their mother's surname, but she went through a complex legal process to allow them to do so.
The children were generally indentured, rather than adopted, to families who took them in.