Cheng, Yin ManYin ManChengDr. CHAN Chui Yi2024-11-142024-11-142024Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, 2024, vol. 33(12), pp. 1559-1577.109267711545083Xhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/10593Parental verbal abuse toward children is common in Hong Kong, and the effect of verbal abuse is long-term and detrimental. The study has two objectives. First, to determine whether parental verbal abuse in childhood is negatively associated with the levels of self-esteem and resilience in adulthood. Second, to examine whether parental warmth buffers the negative effect of verbal abuse on self-esteem and resilience. A community sample of 210 adults participated in this study. As hypothesized, parental verbal abuse was negatively associated with self-esteem and resilience. However, parental warmth did not moderate the relationships between verbal abuse, self-esteem and resilience. Findings suggested that parents should reduce the use of verbal abuse and adopt more positive parenting strategies.enChildhood Verbal AbuseHong Kong AdultsParental Verbal AbuseParental WarmthResilienceSelf-EsteemHurtful words: Examining the protective role of parental warmth against the effect of verbal abuse on self-esteem and resiliencePeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1080/10926771.2024.2415050