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aging

aging

aging ECON

aging bucket N COMPUT

aging period N COMPUT

aging schedule ECON

aging snapshot N COMPUT

password aging COMPUT

aging of loans ECON

aging of portfolio ECON

use aging periods ECON

age <an age; ages> N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Rush and her team use their wits to take on aging evidence and witnesses with buried secrets, uncovering fresh clues, digging into old wounds and doggedly pursuing the truth.
en.wikipedia.org
That means the naked mole-rat ribosomes make fewer errors when producing proteins, resulting in less cell damage and less aging.
www.cbc.ca
Many people fear the aging process and are willing to go to great lengths to try to halt it.
www.theglobeandmail.com
While this cognitive mistake is often attributed to aging, researchers say that college undergraduates are guilty of misnaming as well.
www.dailymail.co.uk
Sufferers exhibit symptoms resembling accelerated aging, including wrinkled skin.
en.wikipedia.org
They have endured the physical scars of amputated, frostbitten limbs and the mental scars of premature aging, memory loss, and, some say quietly, impotence.
foreignpolicy.com
The set-to highlights the passions that can arise when the future of an aging religious property is in the balance.
www.theglobeandmail.com
In a study conducted in 2011 on mice, senescent cells were deliberately eradicated, which led to greater resistance against aging-associated diseases.
en.wikipedia.org
Both women and men can become incontinent from neurologic injury, congenital defects, strokes, multiple sclerosis, and physical problems associated with aging.
en.wikipedia.org
The term indefinite lifespan represents a more achievable state of affairs, because it merely implies freedom from death by aging or infirmity.
en.wikipedia.org

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