Similar words: engage in, large intestine, come into being, seeing that, sightseeing, for the time being, living wage, zeitgeist. Meaning: [eɪdʒ] n. 1. acquiring desirable qualities by being left undisturbed for some time 2. the organic process of growing older and showing the effects of increasing age. adj. growing old.
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121. Edgar put out the ageing Donald's eyes and consigned him to prison.
122. They can no longer rely on conventional market research to predict accurately the spending habits of ageing baby boomers or their children.
123. Throughout 1838, Darwin had been allowing for Lyellian competitive defeats to extinguish some species before their predetermined ageing overcame them.
124. Neither does it deny the ageing process, or the ultimate destination of life itself.
125. Less readily acknowledged are the social and emotional problems that ageing can bring.
126. The task of discovering whether an ageing individual has a drink problem requires considerable tact and sensitivity.
127. This is not just because of the enormous scale of the demands which an ageing population puts on caring organisations.
128. How can health services be restructured to meet the needs of ageing populations more appropriately?
129. The ageing orchard is full of spring bulbs and old fruit trees.
130. For most purposes a rectangular distribution is the most desirable because it provides the appropriate mix of youthful enthusiasm and ageing experience.
131. The amount of standing genetic variation for ageing within populations, and the number of genes involved(sentencedict.com), are not informative.
132. These signs of age, of the ageing process, she greeted and greets with curiosity, with a resolute welcome.
133. It's believed that pollution can form substances in our body known as free radicals which speed up ageing.
134. For many people, ageing is associated with a decline in emotional well-being.
135. Only ten refer - usually more briefly - to their elderly parents, and only eight to their own ageing.
136. Despite claims made by skincare manufacturers, the effects of ageing are irreversible.
137. Intrinsic ageing refers to the inevitable changes built into tissues like skin which are largely determined by genetics.
138. The majority of holdings in the uplands of Great Britain are farmed by owner-occupiers with an ageing population of farmers.
139. Ageing has to be recognized as a process, a gradual transition, rather than a once-for-all event.
140. It is possible that the younger control subjects with a high LI% may develop an adenomatous polyp as an ageing phenomenon.
141. A change in body weight with ageing may be partly the result of an increment in fat mass.
141. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and build good sentences.
142. Aluminium in water is now being linked with premature ageing.
143. He is fifty-three ageing, losing his sight, and should prepare for death.
144. There is however a growing body of work which challenges the models of ageing which underpin current policies.
145. an ageing pop star trying to stage a comeback.
146. An ageing society is not, primarily, a demographic crisis.
147. "Do you worry about ageing?"— 'Not in the slightest.'.
148. The struggle against ageing turned into self-harming and self-mutilation.
149. They are low poisonous and high in ageing properties.
150. A rapidly ageing population makes pensions a particular worry.
More similar words: engage in, large intestine, come into being, seeing that, sightseeing, for the time being, living wage, zeitgeist, mudslinging, living thing, ring finger, lingering, EIN, ringing, rein, lie in, come in, lie-in, skein, done in, wherein, tune in, vote in, give in, fade in, rope in, take in, cave in, heinous, protein.