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agedness

NOUN
  1. the property characteristic of old age

How To Use agedness In A Sentence

  • Bloated, sagging, and among those firm youthful bodies, those undistorted faces, a strange and terrifying monster of middle-agedness, Linda advanced into the room, coquettishly smiling her broken and discoloured smile, and rolling as she walked, with what was meant to be a voluptuous undulation, her enormous haunches. Brave New World
  • I am all for the concept of middle-agedness kicking in somewhere around eighty-five or so, as I'm assuming most of my friends will all be too senile or stoned on their "glaucoma medicine" to join me in reckless frivolities by then anyway. Bluemeany Diary Entry
  • Tenderness crept into her eyes, and her freckles seemed to fade out, and even the small blunt nose of her take on middle-agedness and motherliness. Miss Theodosia's Heartstrings
  • For the moment she was hibernating in her oldness, her agedness. The Virgin and the Gypsy
  • You kind of like to imagine you've got the funk, can still manage it a bit... when did middle-agedness creep up on me? In which I am Officially Aged.
  • Perhaps this very fact had something to do with the noble and sweet disengagedness of manner which marked her unlike those about her, in a world where self-interest of some sort is the ruling motive. The Old Helmet
  • Yvette, pitched in gruesome, deadlocked hostility to the Saywell household, was very old and very wise: with the agedness and the wisdom of the young, which always overleaps the agedness and the wisdom of the old, or the elderly. The Virgin and the Gypsy
  • It is a family responsibility, but lacking a family, a widow has to have certain qualifications, one being the qualification of agedness. Widows
  • Pitt's disengagedness made him more ensnaring to her. A Red Wallflower
  • And tremble at my agedness: apparently my taste in pop was set in stone twenty-nine years ago. Yatima » 2009 » March
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