aged – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
aged
adj.
elderly, old; being a certain number of years old; (Culinary) having reached a desired condition, haveing reached a final condition (of cheeses, wines, fruit, etc.)
n.
elderly people collectively
age
v.
grow older, mature
Ageing
Ageing (British English) or
aging (American English) is the process of becoming older. In the narrow sense, the term refers to biological ageing of human beings, animals and other organisms. In the broader sense, ageing can refer to single cells within an organism (
cellular senescence) or to the population of a species (
population ageing).
aged
Noun
1. people who are old; "special arrangements were available for the aged"
(antonym) young, youth
(hypernym) age group, age bracket, cohort
Adjective
1. advanced in years; (`aged' is pronounced as two syllables); "aged members of the society"; "elderly residents could remember the construction of the first skyscraper"; "senior citizen"
(synonym) elderly, older, senior
(similar) old
2. at an advanced stage of erosion (pronounced as one syllable); "aged rocks"
(similar) worn
3. having attained a specific age; (`aged' is pronounced as one syllable); "aged ten"; "ten years of age"
(synonym) aged(a), of age(p)
(similar) old
4. of wines, fruit, cheeses; having reached a desired or final condition; (`aged' pronounced as one syllable); "mature well-aged cheeses"
(synonym) ripened
(similar) ripe, mature
5. (used of tobacco) aging as a preservative process (`aged' is pronounced as one syllable)
(synonym) cured
(similar) preserved
age
Noun
1. how long something has existed; "it was replaced because of its age"
(hypernym) property
(hyponym) chronological age
(attribute) mature
2. an era of history having some distinctive feature; "we live in a litigious age"
(synonym) historic period
(hypernym) era, epoch
(hyponym) Elizabethan age
(part-holonym) history
3. a time in life (usually defined in years) at which some particular qualification or power arises; "she was now of school age"; "tall for his eld"
(synonym) eld
(hypernym) time of life
(hyponym) age of consent
(part-holonym) life, lifetime, lifespan
(derivation) senesce, get on, mature, maturate
4. a late time of life; "old age is not for sissies"; "he's showing his years"; "age hasn't slowed him down at all"; "a beard white with eld"; "on the brink of geezerhood"
(synonym) old age, years, eld, geezerhood
(hypernym) time of life
(hyponym) dotage, second childhood, senility
(part-meronym) sixties, mid-sixties
5. a prolonged period of time; "we've known each other for ages"; "I haven't been there for years and years"
(synonym) long time, years
(hypernym) time period, period of time, period
(hyponym) long
Verb
1. begin to seem older; get older; "The death of his wife caused him to age fast"
(hypernym) develop
2. grow old or older; "She aged gracefully"; "we age every day--what a depressing thought!"; "Young men senesce"
(synonym) senesce, get on, mature, maturate
(hypernym) develop
(hyponym) turn
(derivation) eld
3. make older; "The death of his child aged him tremendously"
(antonym) rejuvenate
(hypernym) change, alter, modify
(cause) senesce, get on, mature, maturate
(derivation) old age, years, eld, geezerhood
aged
příd.jm.
velmi starý; ve věku
n.
starší lidé
age
v.
stárnout; dělat starší; stárnoucí
aged
Przym.
w wieku; starsi ludzie
age
Czas.
starzeć się; postarzać (kogoś)