- dotage
- dot|age [ `doutıdʒ ] noun HUMOROUSin your dotagein the period of time when you are old
Usage of the words and phrases in modern English. 2013.
Usage of the words and phrases in modern English. 2013.
Dotage — Do tage, n. [From {Dote}, v. i.] 1. Feebleness or imbecility of understanding or mind, particularly in old age; the childishness of old age; senility; as, a venerable man, now in his dotage. [1913 Webster] Capable of distinguishing between the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dotage — index caducity, incapacity Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
dotage — the state of one who dotes, c.1300; see DOTE (Cf. dote) + AGE (Cf. age). Originally of all sorts of mental impairment, not just that resulting from old age. First recorded late 14c. for senility … Etymology dictionary
dotage — senility, *age, senescence Antonyms: infancy … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dotage — [n] feebleness, old age advanced age, decrepitude, elderliness, fatuity, imbecility, infirmity, second childhood*, senectitude, senility, weakness; concepts 405,715 Ant. childhood, strength, youngness, youth, youthfulness … New thesaurus
dotage — ► NOUN ▪ the period of life in which a person is old and weak. ORIGIN from DOTE(Cf. ↑doting) + AGE(Cf. ↑ age) … English terms dictionary
dotage — [dōt′ij] n. [ME < doten, DOTE] 1. feeble and childish state due to old age; senility 2. a doting; foolish or excessive affection … English World dictionary
Dotage — Wikipedia does not have an encyclopedia article for Dotage (search results). You may want to read Wiktionary s entry on dotage instead.wiktionary:Special:Search/dotage … Wikipedia
dotage — [[t]do͟ʊtɪʤ[/t]] N UNCOUNT: usu poss N If someone is in their dotage, they are very old and becoming weak. Even in his dotage, the Professor still sits on the committee. ...spending his dotage in a riverside cottage … English dictionary
dotage — n. to be in one s dotage * * * [ dəʊtɪdʒ] to be in one s dotage … Combinatory dictionary
dotage — noun a) Decline in judgment and other cognitive functions, associated with aging; senility. More care! said the old man. . . . There were in his face marks of deep and anxious thought which convinced me that he could not be, as I had been at… … Wiktionary