English edit

Adjective edit

nonageing (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of nonaging
    • 2004, R.K. Rajput, A Textbook of Electrical Engineering Materials, page 260:
      Silicon steel has substantially nonageing characteristic obtained by the addition of silicon as an alloying element.
    • 2012, Severino P. C. Marques, ‎Guillermo J. Creus, Computational Viscoelasticity, page 36:
      Particularly, in linear nonageing viscoelasticity, interesting applications have been found for Laplace transform techniques.
    • 2014, Chris Gilleard, ‎Paul Higgs, Cultures of Ageing: Self, Citizen and the Body:
      Mid-life cultural practices have increased the care given to maintaining healthy (and thereby nonageing) embodied selves.

Noun edit

nonageing (uncountable)

  1. Lack of aging.
    • 2007, Sara O'Sullivan, Contemporary Ireland:
      A number of features of demographic development in Ireland account for the recent nonageing of its population.
    • 2014, Velu Nair, Textbook of Environmental Medicine, page 210:
      ' [] 'thus easy reverisibility and nonageing of the carbamylated enzymes (c.f. phosphorylated enzymes may undergo ageing by losing one of the alkyl group, thus becoming resistant to hydrolysis).
    • 2017, Kay Aranda, Feminist Theories and Concepts in Healthcare:
      As Sandberg (2013) shows, successful ageing is really successful 'nonageing' or agelessness, while decline discourses on ageing focus on the negative conceptions of decay and the ageing body.