English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin octōgēnārius (containing 80) either directly or via French octogénaire, from Latin octōgēnus (80 each) + -ārius (-ary), from octōgintā (eight tens, 80). Cognate with octogenarian.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

octogenary (not comparable)

  1. (obsolete) Of or related to the number 80, particularly
    Coordinate terms: unary, binary, ternary, trinary, tetranary, quintenary, hexanary, septenary, octonary, nonary, decenary, vicenary, tricenary, quadragenary, quinquagenary, semicentenary, sexagenary, septuagenary, nonagenary, centenary, millenary
    1. Synonym of octogenarian: lasting or aged 80 years; 80-year-old.
      • a. 1697, John Aubrey, “......De Laune”, in Brief Lives:
        [] he went to visit him, being then octogenary, and very decrepid with the gowt, but had his sight and understanding.

Noun edit

octogenary (plural octogenaries)

  1. (obsolete) Synonym of eightysomething: a person 80 to 89 years old.

References edit