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  1. 1. : grown old: such as. a. : of an advanced age. an aged man. b. : having attained a specified age. a man aged 40 years. 2. : typical of old age. the aged wrinkles in my cheeks Shakespeare. 3. : having acquired a desirable quality or undergone an expected and desired change with the passage of time. aged wine. aged cheese. agedness. ˈā-jəd-nəs.

  2. noun [ plural ] uk / ˈeɪ.dʒɪd / us / ˈeɪ.dʒɪd /. the aged. old people when considered as a group: The hospital was built to meet the needs of the aged. Synonym. the elderly. Opposites. the young.

  3. Aged definition: having lived or existed long; of advanced age; old. See examples of AGED used in a sentence.

  4. Synonyms for AGED: older, elderly, ageing, aging, old, senior, geriatric, senescent; Antonyms of AGED: young, youthful, ageless, youngish, adolescent, juvenile, immature, minor.

  5. 5 days ago · 1. adjective. You use aged followed by a number to say how old someone is. Alan has two children, aged eleven and nine. 2. adjective [ADJECTIVE noun] Aged means very old. She has an aged parent who's capable of being very difficult. Synonyms: old, getting on, grey, ancient More Synonyms of aged. 3. plural noun.

  6. 1. of advanced age; old. 2. pertaining to or characteristic of old age: aged wrinkles. 3. of the age of: a man aged 40 years. 4. brought to maturity or mellowness, as wine, cheese, or wood. 5. (of topography) old; approaching peneplanation. n.

  7. noun. people who are old collectively. “special arrangements were available for the aged ” synonyms: elderly. see more.

  8. Definition of aged adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. Jun 2, 2024 · aged (comparative more aged or further aged, superlative most aged or furthest aged) Old. (chiefly non-US) Having the age of.

  10. aged, adj. : someone who is aged 18, 35, 70, etc. is 18, 35, 70, etc. years old. A woman aged 50 has given birth to twins. Men aged between 18 and 35 are most at risk from violent crime. In the second case, a group of students that are of college age are college age (not college aged) students.

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