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How To Use Nonage In A Sentence

  • Abr. 1863 = B.C. 154, 'Pacuvius Brundusinus tragoediarum scriptor clarus habetur, Ennii poetae ex filia nepos, vixitque Romae quoad picturam exercuit ac fabulas venditavit, deinde Tarentum transgressus prope nonagenarius diem obiit.' The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
  • Conclusion: The nonage rehabilitation therapy can enhance the curing raterate, and can decrease the rate.
  • Among the pieces on show were calligraphy and paintings by the 100-year-old master Chen Li-fu and by nonagenarians Chang Long-yien and Fu Chuan-fu, two living greats of the Chinese art scene.
  • Young men, women and children, nonagenarians and the physically challenged thronged the four-day fair, which concluded on July 7.
  • Many nonagenarians might have thought twice about accepting a role in a film. Times, Sunday Times
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  • Conclusion:The method to discover nonage upper esophageal carcinoma by using gas-barium double contrast kinesis radiography is very fit for basement hospitals.
  • It was, she told her fellow researchers, as if a nonagenarian suddenly looked forty-something.
  • I nds nei? coney finijh generom honey honour linage manour puiny minow miniature minijh nonage onion - opinion penance runagate Jinew Spaniel fynod Trinity vinegar vinew. Practical Phonography: Or, the New Art of Rightly Speling and Writing Words by the Sound Thereof ...
  • Kunkel and Perls believe that additional genetic analyses of nonagenarians and centenarians will lead to the identification of a few genes that confer longevity in humans.
  • In 1954, just prior to becoming a nonagenarian, Dr. Thomas Nixon Carver, who had retired from the Harvard faculty more than two decades before, began a new career as a weekly columnist for the Los Angeles Times.
  • Eva Hughes had never even used a typewriter before starting computer lessons but now the nonagenarian has proven it's never too late to learn.
  • I find that, during my nonage, I had the reputation of a very sullen youth, but was always a favourite of my schoolmaster, who used to say, “that my parts were solid, and would wear well.” Looking back to 1711
  • Seth's son Enos was a peppy nonagenarian when he begat Cainan, and he lived 815 years afterwards; and so on up to Methuselah, who set the biblical record at 969 years.
  • Most of us spend a good part of our lives in clearing our minds of the notions that sprang up unchecked during our nonage. Eve and David
  • At ninety, Sarah was unquestionably a woman whom a modern obstetrician would call an elderly primigravida, a term that includes all women over thirty-five—not just nonagenarians. Beginner’s Grace
  • At the age of 92, the great master began work on her last major photographic project-stunning portraits of other nonagenarians.
  • If that happen in their nonage, which is probable, appoint commendatories to discharge the duty for them for a laudable allowance, but gathering the fruits for the support of your grandchildren, till they come to virility to be consecrated, '&c. The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • (where Lycomedes then reigned) in his nonage to be brought up; to avoid that hard destiny of the oracle (he should be slain at the siege of Troy): and for that cause was nurtured in Genesco, amongst the king's children in a woman's habit; but see the event: he compressed Deidamia, the king's fair daughter, and had a fine son, called Pyrrhus by her. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The nonagenarian took as his new bride a fiftysomething museum director, Louise Kertz.
  • I nds nei? coney finijh generom honey honour linage manour puiny minow miniature minijh nonage onion - opinion penance runagate Jinew Spaniel fynod Trinity vinegar vinew. Practical Phonography: Or, the New Art of Rightly Speling and Writing Words by the Sound Thereof ...
  • My mother, a nonagenarian, has always had a sense of occasion.
  • It started here, absolutely," said Sir Brian Urquhart, a nonagenarian former under secretary general, recalling the birth of what he described as a sophisticated if entangled plan. NYT > Home Page
  • In a better possible world, houses of worship would never be welcome, but only tolerated as remnants of humanity's nonage. Andrew Levine: Of Mosques and Marriage
  • The two broke free but were cuffed by police after escaping the attacking nonagenarian through a bedroom window.
  • On the other hand, the mother, a sprightly nonagenarian, acquitted herself well in the interview, and both she and Ann came across as ‘better’ people as a result.
  • You and I would, you know, become men and women, while we were yet scarcely more than children — We have run, while yet in our nonage, through the passions and adventures of youth, and therefore we are now old before our day, and the winter of our life has come on ere its summer was well begun. — Saint Ronan's Well
  • Some statutes specify how people get married; these generally include both procedural requirements and who can get married, including prohibitions on consanguinity, nonage, and same-sex status in many states. The Volokh Conspiracy » Iowa state trial court judge rules for gay marriage:
  • For we cannot deny the church of God both in Asia and Africa, if we do not forget the peregrinations of the apostles, the deaths of the martyrs, the sessions of many and (even in our reformed judgment) lawful councils, held in those parts in the minority and nonage of ours. Religio Medici
  • His father, a nonagenarian, lived long enough to see his unconventional son become an international celebrity.
  • In my nonage I used to carry grudges, when I matured I got even, now in my dotage I get ahead. Think Progress » McCain Attacks Blogosphere
  • I moved on to read CanLit in general and made some wonderful discoveries about the literature of this amazing country and finally discovered The Stone Angel by Margaret Laurence and the irascible nonagenarian Hagar Shipley. 42 entries from November 2007
  • Being blessed with many long-lived ancestors - nonagenarians all over the place - I am resigned to seeing Senile Decay as the rather monotonous cause of death.
  • the nonagenarian inhabitants of the nursing home
  • Mind you, that's to be expected from a group of nonagenarians - aged, as they are, at 91, 94, and 95 years old.
  • During the evening a painting, a montage of 150 years of schooling by Badsey artist Michael Barnard, was unveiled by nonagenarians Molly Corbett and Fred Mason, the school's oldest ex-pupils present.
  • Kunkel and Perls believe that additional genetic analyses of nonagenarians and centenarians will lead to the identification of a few genes that confer longevity in humans.
  • As is the case for many nonagenarians, Ken Clark is experiencing age-related difficulties and is not in the best of health, but on behalf of his many colleagues, admirers and friends, I wish him the best.
  • Now a nonagenarian, Hashim's life is pretty simple.
  • Guilbert Ralston, one of the seven sons of a rich merchant prince who as youths terrorized the countryside (we are not told where it is) disappears "while still in his nonage. “Living hand to mouth. . .”
  • With her encouragement, the nonagenarian re-created lost sketches of his hotels that proved the theories.
  • And as often happens with nonagenarians (which she was that summer), the people of whom she spoke most affectionately - Bach, Beethoven, Stravinsky, - were all dead.
  • There has been no such division, however, over the participation of two nonagenarians, one in Mexico and one in Los Angeles.

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