old

  • 51old — 1. adjective /əʊld,oʊld/ a) Of an object, concept, relationship, etc., having existed for a relatively long period of time. an old abandoned building b) Of a living being, having lived for most of the expected years. an old friend Syn: ancient …

    Wiktionary

  • 52Old M-94 — M 94 (old) – Au Train River Bridge U.S. National Register of Historic Places …

    Wikipedia

  • 53old — See: chip off the old block, comfortable as an old shoe, common as an old shoe, of old …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 54old — adj 1. older, aging, elderly, aged, vintage, on or up in years, along or advanced in years, past one s prime, Inf. over the hill, Derog. long in the teeth; gray, gray haired, gray headed, grizzly, grizzled; hoary, Rare. hoar, venerable,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 55old — adjective 1) old people Syn: elderly, aged, older, senior, venerable, in one s dotage, long in the tooth, ancient, decrepit, doddery, senescent, senile; informal getting on, past it, over the hill 2) old clot …

    Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • 56old —   Kahiko (usually not of people); o o, elemakule, luahine.   Also: mākuakua, makua lua, ālu a, ele , makule, kolo u a, kolopupū, āleuleu, pāleuleu, pāwelu, māuaua, kū olo, āpela, pane e, kolepeia alu. See old age, old man, old woman. To cling to… …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 57OLD — Backup file (Computing » File Extensions) * Old Lady Driver (Business » Positions) * Old Town, Maine USA (Regional » Airport Codes) * Orchid List Digest (Community » Media) …

    Abbreviations dictionary

  • 58old — [OE] Etymologically, old means ‘grown up’. It comes from a prehistoric West Germanic *altha (source also of German alt and Dutch oud) which was a past participial adjective formed from the base of a verb meaning ‘grow, nourish’. (A precisely… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 59old —    or auld is a prefix to numerous nicknames, or names for Nick1, the devil, who was liable to appear if you spoke about him directly: whence our expression talk of the devil, if a person about whom we have been speaking in his absence comes into …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 60old — [OE] Etymologically, old means ‘grown up’. It comes from a prehistoric West Germanic *altha (source also of German alt and Dutch oud) which was a past participial adjective formed from the base of a verb meaning ‘grow, nourish’. (A precisely… …

    Word origins