What are some opposite words for age?
Antonyms for age
eɪdʒage
This page is about all possible antonyms and opposite words for the term age.
Wiktionary
English Synonyms and Antonyms
age
Sequence and succession apply to events viewed as following one another; time and duration denote something conceived of as enduring while events take place and acts are done. According to the necessary conditions of human thought, events are contained in time as objects are in space, time existing before the event, measuring it as it passes, and still existing when the event is past. Duration and succession are more general words than time; we can speak of infinite or eternal duration or succession, but time is commonly contrasted with eternity. Time is measured or measurable duration.
Synonyms:
date, duration, eon, epoch, era, period, season, sequence, succession, term, time, while
Complete Dictionary of Synonyms and Antonyms
Matched Categories
Princeton's WordNet
agenoun
how long something has existed
"it was replaced because of its age"
Antonyms:
rejuvenateSynonyms:
old age, long time, geezerhood, years, historic period, eldhistoric period, agenoun
an era of history having some distinctive feature
"we live in a litigious age"
Antonyms:
rejuvenateSynonyms:
years, long time, old age, geezerhood, historic period, eldage, eldnoun
a time of life (usually defined in years) at which some particular qualification or power arises
"she was now of school age"; "tall for his eld"
Antonyms:
rejuvenateSynonyms:
old age, long time, geezerhood, years, historic period, eldlong time, age, yearsnoun
a prolonged period of time
"we've known each other for ages"; "I haven't been there for years and years"
Antonyms:
rejuvenateSynonyms:
long time, geezerhood, eld, old age, days, historic period, yearsold age, years, age, eld, geezerhoodverb
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"
Antonyms:
rejuvenateSynonyms:
long time, geezerhood, eld, old age, days, historic period, yearsageverb
begin to seem older; get older
"The death of his wife caused him to age fast"
Antonyms:
rejuvenatesenesce, age, get on, mature, maturateverb
grow old or older
"She aged gracefully"; "we age every day--what a depressing thought!"; "Young men senesce"
Antonyms:
rejuvenateSynonyms:
get on, shape up, progress, bestride, come on, grow, climb on, be on, suppurate, board, come along, senesce, get along, get along with, mount up, get on with, advance, jump on, fester, ripen, mount, maturate, mature, hop onageverb
make older
"The death of his child aged him tremendously"
Antonyms:
rejuvenate
Synonyms, Antonyms & Associated Words
agenoun
Synonyms:
maturity, seniority, epoch, period, time, century, eon, climacteric, old age, dotage, senescence, senility, decrepitude, superannuation, longevityAssociated words:
nostology, geratology, geromorphism, coetaneous, coeval, contemporaneous
How to use age in a sentence?
It is encouraging and perhaps to be celebrated that women are detecting similar rates of cancers and this should arm women with confidence that they are performing this task well, the risk of breast cancer increases with a woman's age, so it is vital older women continue to be breast aware.
Our show is very female-driven and the plight of women right now in this country is remarkable. What is happening, what lays ahead of us and what battles we're gon na have to wage to not go back into some dark age, it's frightening.
Every age has gifts we need, and every age has needs we gift.
The vaquita can't recover in two years, because they only reproduce every two years, and only 25 of those left are of reproducing age, in order to recover a population of 5,000 individuals, there will have to be a long range plan of 20 or 30 years.
Public knowledge about spousal loss in old age has in general a negative connotation -- bereavement is usually seen as an individual issue, however bereaved individuals vary considerably in their reactions to loss, and little is known on how the historical context contributes to adaptation to spousal loss.
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