Middle English, borrowed from the Anglo-French aage, age (formerly Old French edage, eage), from eÃ, aé© “age, lifetime” (goes back to the Latin aetÄt-, aetÄs, contraction of anterior aevitÄs, from aevum “time, lifetime” + -itÄt-, -itÄs -ity) + -age -age â more at aye entry 3 see act an age; Coons are getting older; Golden Age; in modern times; age; Mature; minor. Young age, racial and ethnic differences, poor education, poor pregnancy preparation, and a history of trauma can exacerbate the effects of stress. A version of this article appears in the October 2020 issue of Fortune titled “An IPO Coup for the Trade War Era.” Let`s say “children aged 6 to 12” or “aged 6 to 12”? The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. 5th edition 2011. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Also included are the age of each house, as well as its condition and quality. Many people of color are mentally conditioned at a young age to navigate society in a certain way to stay safe. Period, epoch, epoch, age signify a division of time. The period can refer to a period of any length.
Periods of economic prosperity refer to a period that begins or is triggered by a quality, change, or series of important or visible events. The steam engine marked a new epoch in the industrial age, indicating a period of history characterized by a new or different order of things. The era of the era of global communication is often used in a rather specific period of time dominated by an important figure or trait. Samuel Johnson Hildebrand took his first job in the oil industry at the age of 20. Middle English, borrowed from Anglo-French, goes back to the Latin -äticum (as in viÄticum “provision for a journey”), neutral of -äticus, adjective suffix of appurtenance, of -a- (probably generalized from verbal derivatives, such as vÄnÄticus “used for hunting”, from vÄnÄrÄ “to hunt”) + -ticus, borrowed from the Greek -tikos, generalized from derivatives of agent nouns (such as athlÄtikÓs athletic) of athlÄÌtÄs athlet.