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meaning - What is the difference between aged and age? - English . . . Per the Macmillan dictionary, aged is an adjective: 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 Note the preponderance of college age over
at the age of vs at age - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The only difference is in register: they're both equally valid in professional writing Writing “at the age of five” is more formal, while “at age five” is more technical or direct Modern and effective language tends towards brevity, so the second wins in that sense
Understanding as of, as at, and as from Joel is mistaken when he says that as of means "up to and including a point of time," although it is often used to mean so As of designates the point in time from which something occurs So as of some point would mean from the date specified onward However, his answering of the best way to say each phrase is spot on One may use either until or up to to mean the time before which something
How to properly answer an Age field in a form? [closed] If for an infant, you might need to say 6 months, 18 months, etc With regard to your school project interview, you would first review your project requirements to see if they specify a format for the age If they do not, write it as 24 years, 48 years, etc
grammaticality - From the age or ages of fifteen to twenty-one . . . A range of ages ("from age 1 to age 2") starts at one age (singular) and ends at another We can also talk about the period between a pair of ages (plural) The expression "from the age of fifteen to the age of twenty-one" can be written without the second occurrence of "from the age of", as in your example
Which is it: 1½ years old or 1½ year old? [duplicate] If the entry is part of a classification: That kid is a one-and-a-half-year-old If the entry is describing the age of the person: That kid is one and a half years old Both of these work, and work similarly for whole numbers: That man is a 50-year-old [person] That man is 50 years old
1 year old vs. 1 year of age - is one of them the correct form? 2 Under 1 year of age marks a specific upper limit that is reached on the child's first birthday On the other hand, you might refer to a child as " 1 year old " at any time between the child's first second birthdays Nevertheless, that does not wholly address the issue for two reasons:
vocabulary - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I considered that "pre-teen" technically fits that age range, but to me, that term strongly implies a child in the 10-12 range (just before they hit 13 and become a teenager)