middle-age

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Adjective[edit]

middle-age (not comparable)

  1. (quasi-adjective) attributive form of Middle Ages
    • 1840, Gen. P. Thompson, Exerc., volume V, page 31:
      With the same precaution that they would have consorted with the evil spirits of middle-age romance.
    • 1853, Ruskin, Lect. Archit., chapter iv, page 217:
      That child is working in the middle-age spirit — the other in the modern spirit.
    • 1869, F. W. Newman, Misc., page 46:
      Perhaps it incapacitated the Arabs and the middleage Schoolmen for all but formal reasoning.

Further reading[edit]