The difference between Ageing and Old
When used as nouns, ageing means the process of becoming older or more mature, whereas old means people who are old.
When used as adjectives, ageing means becoming elderly, whereas old means of an object, concept, relationship, etc., having existed for a relatively long period of time. of a living being, having lived for most of the expected years. of a perishable item, having existed for most, or more than its shelf life.
check bellow for the other definitions of Ageing and Old
-
Ageing as a verb (Australia, New Zealand, British):
-
Ageing as a noun (Australia, New Zealand, British):
The process of becoming older or more mature.
-
Ageing as a noun (Australia, New Zealand, British):
The deliberate act of making something (such as an antique) appear older than it is.
-
Ageing as a noun (Australia, New Zealand, British, gerontology):
Becoming senescent; accumulating damage to macromolecules, cells, tissues and organs with the passage of time.
-
Ageing as an adjective (Australia, New Zealand, British):
Becoming elderly.
Examples:
"The ageing artist could no longer steadily hold the brush."
-
Old as an adjective:
Of an object, concept, relationship, etc., having existed for a relatively long period of time. Of a living being, having lived for most of the expected years. Of a perishable item, having existed for most, or more than its shelf life.
Examples:
"an old abandoned building;  an old friend"
"a wrinkled old man"
"an old loaf of bread"
-
Old as an adjective:
Of an item that has been used and so is not new .
Examples:
"I find that an old toothbrush is good to clean the keyboard with."
-
Old as an adjective:
Having existed or lived for the specified time.
Examples:
"How old are they? She’s five years old and he's seven. We also have a young teen and a two-year-old child."
"My great-grandfather lived to be a hundred and one years old."
-
Old as an adjective:
Of an earlier time. Former, previous. That is no longer in existence. Obsolete; out-of-date. Familiar.
Examples:
"My new car is not as good as my old one.  nowrap a school reunion for Old Etonians"
"The footpath follows the route of an old railway line."
"That is the old way of doing things; now we do it this way."
"When he got drunk and quarrelsome they just gave him the old heave-ho."
-
Old as an adjective:
Tiresome.
Examples:
"Your constant pestering is getting old."
-
Old as an adjective:
Said of subdued colors, particularly reds, pinks and oranges, as if they had faded over time.
-
Old as an adjective:
A grammatical intensifier, often used in describing something positive. (Mostly in idioms like good old, big old and little old, any old and some old.)
Examples:
"We're having a good old time. nowrap My next car will be a big old SUV.  nowrap My wife makes the best little old apple pie in Texas."
-
Old as an adjective (obsolete):
Excessive, abundant.
-
Old as a noun (with "the"):
People who are old; old beings; the older generation, taken as a group.
Examples:
"A civilised society should always look after the old in the community."
Compare words:
Compare with synonyms and related words:
- ancient vs old
- long in the tooth vs old
- aged vs old
- ageing vs old
- aging vs old
- elderly vs old
- long in the tooth vs old
- old vs on in years
- aged vs old
- of age vs old
- brand new vs old
- fresh vs old
- new vs old
- old vs young
- erstwhile vs old
- ex- vs old
- former vs old
- old vs one-time
- old vs past
- antiquated vs old
- obsolete vs old
- current vs old
- latest vs old
- new vs old