Now, he was quite content to work on and draw a fairly respectable salary as an alternative to vegetating on a basic old age pension. |
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Many young people are refusing to contribute for fear that they will receive nothing back in their old age. |
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Therefore there are many more people suffering the diseases that were once linked only with extreme old age. |
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I thought about my parents, now in their early seventies, still hale but voyaging steadily into old age. |
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The steam locomotive evokes nostalgic memories of a bygone era with its glory and old age charm. |
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That at the ripe old age of a quarter-century the play still crackles with cachinnation is a hopeful sign. |
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Money purchase or defined contribution plans shift the risk of providing for old age on to the employees. |
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The exhibition presents Whistler's women in the three ages of childhood, adulthood and old age. |
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People are living longer, and with old age comes frailty and more long term illnesses. |
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Fortunately, the children knew they had to be capable of standing on their own feet and supporting her through old age. |
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He plans to gut social security and turn it from old age insurance to a pension plan. |
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The present old age pension compared to today's average wage is an unforgivable insult and an absolute disgrace. |
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You used to die at home of old age, rather than in hospital being treated for something incurable. |
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Last year the pensions commission warned that 12 million people are failing to save enough for their old age. |
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We all know that everyone grows with a lot of features carried over from childhood to old age! |
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He had yet to be diagnosed with the Parkinson's disease that would afflict his old age and he was still fighting. |
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It is accepted that most people are not saving enough for their old age and will have to rely on means-tested benefits. |
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Even in my old age the blood of my people allows me to maintain an impeccable sense of sight. |
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Had he decided to stick around another few decades he most likely would've entered old age quite prosperous. |
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Many people, however, spend a substantial part of old age in a debilitating condition. |
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The essays he wrote in his old age put him in the role of the nation's conscience. |
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All this was in complete contrast to the manner of most people in their old age. |
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Adolescence is generally a healthy period of life compared with early childhood and old age. |
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I think it's important to spread your assets, and not rely completely on your pension to see you through old age. |
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The anger that people feel about having their old age stolen from them is growing stronger. |
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So, stories about how people are putting too little aside for old age are in the news again. |
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Grace was his only child. a child of his old age who had brought him nothing but joy. |
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There will also be an incentive for people to move from England to Scotland for free personal care in their old age. |
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She suffered in her old age, losing the ability to eat, walk, go to the toilet and wash. |
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He played competitive tennis until he was well into old age and only ever became angry on the tennis court. |
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Why do so many people now refuse to save for their old age because they do not trust some of our biggest financial institutions? |
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The neoclassical theory says that people will save the right amount for their old age. |
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The left champions the equal right to healthcare and the sanctity of childhood and old age. |
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When I reached the ripe old age of fifteen, I signed up for the Air Cadets. |
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One of the few benefits of old age is that you don't have to worry what people think about you, he tells me. |
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Julian Barnes's new book of short stories is concerned with old age and death. |
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The Levi's name has grown into doddering old age in a brutally competitive apparel market. |
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At the inception of the welfare state, people were prepared to believe that the government would look after them in old age. |
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Your plan to spend everything you have and more as soon as possible seems a certain recipe for a penurious old age. |
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There were old age pensioners taking advantage of the special rate, and some kids. |
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An army of old age pensioners demanded an end to spiralling council tax on Friday. |
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The symptoms of myotonic dystrophy may appear at any time from birth to old age and can affect both males and females. |
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He is getting wiser in his old age having mastered the art of slipstreaming behind well built ladies. |
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The boomers will require not only solutions for their serious health issues, but also some innovative gadgets to help them ease into old age. |
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Surely, there are greater crusades in life than fighting acne in adolescence and wrinkles in old age. |
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North Sea gas supplies are gradually dwindling, with much of the infrastructure now at a ripe old age. |
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The lining, pure silk, may be dropping off out of old age, but the thick, weathered wool still does its job. |
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She's found that with the right kind of weight training, you can resist some of the illnesses and weaknesses that come with old age. |
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Sadly, only the well-heeled can afford the comfort and security of quality old age homes. |
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She has become more docile and sleepy in her old age, although sometimes she still gets a burst of energy, which is wonderful. |
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He was storing for the future, saving for a rainy day, providing for his old age. |
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Regular contributions to a pension scheme were, we were told, a guarantee of a secure old age. |
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Schultz is a man facing old age and his looming mortality with a dim sadness that seems to complement his general ennui. |
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The vast majority die of old age, disease or unexpected encounters with cars. |
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With white wines they progress from almost water clear when young, to gold and amber in old age. |
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It's overwhelmingly likely he will die of old age in prison rather than be executed. |
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And furthermore, he has mellowed a lot in his old age, and is very kind to everyone. |
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She was supposed to live to a ripe old age and die peacefully in her sleep, devoid of any pain. |
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Graham wants to grow vegetables as well as flowers and I want to plant a couple of trees to make a woody arbour for my old age. |
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Instead of dying in old age, the human being lapses into a coma and gradually shrinks to the size and condition of a fetus. |
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As I approach middle age I find maturity is best summed up as 40 is the old age of youth and 50 is the youth of old age. |
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At the ripe old age of eighty Buddha prepared his disciples for his death and quietly died at night. |
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Glaucoma is more common in old age, and happens when the optic nerve in the eye is damaged. |
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Dying of old age while in the waiting room has been a running joke for decades. |
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As he entered old age Philp reacted to increasing disability and frailty with typical resilience and dignity. |
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The first question asks the age at which respondents believe old age begins. |
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Today, the experience of old age is moving away from that of the wealthy leisured elite of Rome to one characterised by inequality and poverty. |
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This is the case with provisions for old age, nursing care, the health system, and federalism. |
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At the ripe old age of 78 and after creating an Irish institution now famous the world over, Arthur Guinness shuffled off this mortal coil. |
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It is guaranteed to grow for life, or at least into your old age, because of its genetic programming. |
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But would these sprightly veterans have been better advised to avoid the stresses and strains of full-time toil in old age? |
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But in my ripe old age of 29 years, I have to say I was completely disappointed by my digital viewing experience. |
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At the ripe old age of 38, I found myself CEO of a public company that, at the time, had the biggest one-day gain in Wall Street history. |
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So the government will control more of our lives but without making our old age much safer. |
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The depigmented, white strands of old age tended to give his hair a somewhat bleached and unnatural shading. |
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The lady reminded Fiona of her own grandmother, who passed away three years ago from cancer at the ripe old age of ninety-one. |
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Born in Bologna in 1706, he lived to the ripe old age of 78, a remarkable achievement at the time. |
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In a susceptible smoker for 20 years, emphysema could develop along a linear course from middle to old age. |
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In life, Maxwell was lean, wiry, with an aquiline handsomeness that became impressively hawklike in old age. |
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The most senior of all the Soviet defectors to the west, Orlov survived into his old age. |
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Most people don't need hospitals until old age, but some bring it on themselves through poor diet and ciggies, or drug and alcohol abuse. |
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Margrith has trained young, aspiring hospital and old age home managers to be, in housekeeping, specializing in cooking. |
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His sister and I were talking about how he saw 25 as the beginning of the slide to old age and decrepitude, so he never wanted to live that long. |
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This compromise I would not make, not for love or money or threats of a lonely old age. |
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When it comes to recording the day, I can't help but wish they had pills for those who, in old age, lose the quality of loving kindness. |
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As more women survive into old age, the role of gender differences among older adults will become more important. |
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In the gerontocracy that was early America, the Puritans held that living to a ripe old age was a sign from above. |
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The film, then, works both as a paean to old age and a bittersweet look at a bygone era. |
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On her death certificate the doctor recorded that the town's oldest Marlburian had died simply of old age. |
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I have it on good authority that he's always been like that, it's not merely a product of old age. |
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Sometimes it looks as if death and old age are included among these diseases. |
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Should everybody know what diseases they are predisposed to suffer from in old age? |
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The reason to do it now is preventive to try and avoid a toothless old age for her. |
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Over the weekend the Sunday Times wrote an article saying people shouldn't rely on buy-to-let to finance their old age. |
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These cooperators were not utopians, but rather male heads of households seeking to make it to old age without upsetting the status quo. |
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All share some of the ailments of old age, including poor memories, fading eyesight and bad hearing. |
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His white tentlike garb must hide a multitude of tell tale signs of old age. |
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In his old age, he had become ridiculous, supporting all manner of madcap Maoist projects. |
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Drug screening is beginning at a British university for a pill that, when taken daily in old age, should improve memory. |
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Given your total lifetime income, you don't want to suffer in youth and live high on the hog in old age, or vice versa. |
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At the grand old age of 22, Wilhemina the puss has enjoyed more than her share of cat lives. |
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They are miserable, so sick from poverty that they have entered old age or second childhood. |
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These are the signs not only of old age, but of maturity, experience and wisdom. |
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Once there, her life begins, from crawling to walking, through playful child, bashful teenager, lover and mother, into old age. |
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Later, as she declined into alcoholism, old age, and general battiness, her genius itself rusted over. |
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But in one who often contemplates the certainty of old age, the pride of youth will either vanish entirely or will be weakened. |
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At this ripe old age, the tree's enormous limbs are supported by steel columns and cables. |
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Pankaj is like those dilettantes one reads about in Somerset Maugham, who fear boredom more than old age, death, poverty or mendicancy. |
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This disease of old age starts as memory loss and manifests in a person with the total loss of mental faculties. |
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Going with the frustrations of old age, he said there develops a degree of impatience. |
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The most the Old Testament writers hope for is a ripe old age ended by a quick and merciful death. |
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Mr. Jared still lives in that house, now all alone, and the last I heard he was senile in old age, half crazy and awaiting death each day. |
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A young man crippled by a disease of old age may not get the operation he and his family have been hoping and praying for over the last year. |
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Men expected to die before their wives, just as women foresaw a life after their husband's death in old age. |
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Practitioners use ginseng as a tonic, primarily to treat patients who are worn-out, either from overwork, emotional stress, or old age. |
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The crabbedness of old age or misfortune was evidently looked upon as witchcraft. |
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This situation in particular refers to people who receive social welfare benefits and old age pension recipients. |
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The circumambulation also signifies the four stages of life, namely childhood, youth, middle age and old age. |
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Both in middle age and old age the death rates were significantly higher in smokers than in non-smokers. |
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In old age he was taken by folie de grandeur and bankrupted himself with ventures. |
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Apparently, according to this report, I may be more likely to suffer from memory loss and possibly even brain shrinkage in my old age. |
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Five months ago the high tension wires snapped with old age in Meier Street and the pole fell over. |
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He was a reforming works and pensions secretary who must tackle the thorny problems of invalidity and provision for old age. |
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The five categories of risk are sickness, invalidity, old age, accidents at work and occupational diseases, and finally unemployment. |
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Though in the prime of life, he still had the joyful high spirits of a young man, which he kept, I believe, into extreme old age. |
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Hearing loss in old age is usually gradual, and often begins with being unable to hear the most high-pitched sounds. |
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He's catapulted into old age to experience the last days of his life, and the teenage hellion he once was turns up in the here and now. |
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But I have stabilised, and I have optimised my chances of living on into a reasonable old age. |
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Vinnie Roe is a wonderfully brave horse but old age is catching up with him. |
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They were forced to move out of their home, in the upmarket Morningside area of Edinburgh, and into care when old age caught up with them. |
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In the eyes of society, and the caring services, old age is the most unattractive part of the service. |
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Using your home to provide you with extra money in your old age needs careful thinking and it shouldn't be done lightly. |
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Cocoa died in her sleep after a year and Fred lived to the ripe old age of two and half. |
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Over the years she lost the typescript of the manuscript she and Coates had labored over during summer 1947, so in her old age she started over. |
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Social programs cover old age, invalidism, death, sickness and maternity, work injury, unemployment, and allowances per child. |
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He says if he needs a body bag, it's going to be when he dies from old age and he knew that anyway. |
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Many women after spending a life working on farms have no record of any employment and are not entitled to a contributory old age pension. |
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As life expectancies increase and we become more healthy in old age, sexagenarians may well want to do things undreamed of by their predecessors. |
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Curiously, her mother never saw it either and died at a ripe old age with that particular ambition unfulfilled. |
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But as retirement nears, the company and its pension scheme goes up in smoke and with it your plans for a comfortable old age. |
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The programme also included acupressure, naturopathy, homeopathy and tips on preventing old age diseases. |
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None of the deaths certified as due to old age was assessed by a necropsy, and none had a coroner's inquest. |
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I don't know whether it's old age or just a string of brain fades, but I just did something I've only done once before in all these years. |
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He was handsomely Celtic, unwrinkled in old age, and his lifelong love of the outdoors gave him a permanent tan. |
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Scientists now know that's not true, and the brain continually rewires and adapts itself even in old age. |
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Her biology lesson was taught by Mrs. Waller, an old woman who seemed to be going soft in her old age. |
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Most plantations are now mature and many will be felled or will deteriorate due to old age during the next decade. |
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People in receipt of old age pension and medical cards may be able to receive assistance in neutering cats and dogs at other times also. |
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The problem is that security in old age depends increasingly on the vagaries of the stock market. |
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A while back I was reminded of Dot the Dauntless, who sustained herself through a long old age perfectly happily and adequately by her changeless routine. |
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All the tranquillity he ever knew he enjoyed in his old age. |
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A good hooley and a couple of large bottles was his recipe for old age. |
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Since then, he has spent most of his time in the affable fog of extreme old age, almost entirely shielded from public view. |
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The three basic ways for prisoners to die are old age, disease or violently. |
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For more than 60 years it has helped millions of Americans avoid poverty in old age, upon becoming disabled, or after the death of a family wage earner. |
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Nor is it true that childless people are doomed, as the pope warned, to be lonely and sad in their old age. |
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Develop good balance and you'll remain a dynamo well into old age. |
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Should she leave her husband and endure loneliness or tolerate his dalliance and keep a companion for old age? |
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I am about to become an old age pensioner, and am having to jump through hoops in order to get my pension paid into an account at my local post office. |
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Set against all these worries, the perks of a few quid in government money and the admonition that you need kids to support you in your old age is not exactly convincing. |
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The youth bust and old age boom will change the states' dependency ratios. |
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Hollywood and the media promote positive images of older people, but it would be surprising if society's stereotypes of beauty were to be reoriented towards images of old age. |
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Since a miraculous cure to fix the ills of American health care is unlikely to happen quickly, to help you stay healthy to a ripe old age, what are your options? |
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I never had trouble talking to guys on the phone before, except for that first time, and now, at the ripe old age of twenty-four, I couldn't think of anything to say. |
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These Republicans still frighten voters with visions of an old age in poverty and frailty. |
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Now in his old age, Hitchcock develops crushes on young women, gives them money, and asks them to do god knows what. |
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Further, the lucubrations of a bitter, lonely, and hurt old man did indeed lead him to a convenient anti-Semitism above the then-norm in his old age. |
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This means that the conclusions he reaches concerning cultural values attaching to old age are not in any way tested against records of actual practices. |
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Or because the series of unfortunate events that we call old age tends to find and sicken the elderly? |
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In her old age the Cutty Sark became a merchant navy training ship. |
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In 1926 it was the National Progressives that agreed to support the Liberals provided that they enacted legislation granting old age security pensions for seniors. |
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That's why the White House wants to use tax subsidies and other incentives to encourage seniors to buy long-term-care insurance to pay for their own old age. |
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She had planned for her retirement and old age with meticulous care. |
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It has golden hills and oak trees and a fine long seacoast, and I will live here as long as I can afford to, even if it means spending my old age in a trailer park. |
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The woman realized that she became a bhikkhuni only in her old age and that she must not be negligent, but must make use of the remaining period of her life to the utmost. |
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He has a bulbous-shaped face brought on by a combination of old age and his struggle with melanoma. |
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As in Homer, after further tribulation, he will eventually reach Ithaca, kill Penelope's suitors, and live with wife and son until a peaceful death in old age. |
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Historically, the cultural pattern of old age support was ultimogeniture and the youngest son would typically inherit the largest share of the parent's animals. |
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Not many die of old age in these parts, but they clearly do there. |
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In most Pakistani families, men are dominant and sons are valued as guardians of the family, upholders of family honour and providers of old age insurance for the parents. |
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He will be the restorer of life and a nourisher of Naomi in her old age. |
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He wants to steamroller ahead with plans to make people save for their old age, rather than compelling the state or the employer to contribute more. |
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Mrs Tutty put her aunt's old age down to her steely determination. |
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The late Norman MacCaig once told him about old age withering his talents. |
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I would quite like Mr P-A to get a little further along in his career before he hits old age, but if he has to pass the flame to the next generation, so be it. |
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And the wisdom of old age will supersede the passion of our youth. |
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Old Thomas of Dentonsville was such a one who lived to see the end of his particular War and returned from whence he came to reach a ripe old age. |
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My stepfather has apparently gone a bit churchy in his old age. |
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To some extent the poems in his seventh collection continue in that vein, but in many of them the poet takes a somber turn as he muses over old age and death. |
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Forget those fluffy-chinned policemen, the true sign of incipient old age these days is a trip to the Under-21 World Cup to witness rugby's gilded future. |
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I used to think that 70 was a fierce old age but it's not really! |
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If Lear is played too old and too enfeebled to continue to do his job, then the play becomes a tragedy of old age and filial lack of attention, which is not the full play. |
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They grow up in confusion and bewilderment as children, then often pass into denial as young adults and sometimes remain frightened even into old age. |
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That old rooster that died of old age was tomorrow's coq au vin. |
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The Hubble Constant is highlighted in the National Geographic article, and conventionally accepted cosmogonies are presented as proof for the old age of the Universe. |
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The Institute of Health and Welfare estimates that 80 per cent of health related conditions in old age are preventable or postponable if corrected in time. |
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Besides, they generously donate foodgrains to the old age homes. |
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Isn't it amazing how crabby some sisters can get in their old age? |
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Any change in a system that is creaking from old age has to be welcomed. |
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He maintained that the weakness of old age should be resisted by a seriously undertaken regimen of frugal eating, moderate exercise and intellectual pursuit. |
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The predominant pattern is for a successful king's power to fade in old age and for kingly pre-eminence to pass to the ruler of one of the other kingdoms. |
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She was celebrated for her poetic talent, her stunning beauty during her youth, her trifling with amorous men, and her suffering from decrepitude and destitution in old age. |
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Promising fun and attractive prizes for the winners, the hostesses say that part of the proceeds of the event go to old age homes and to animal welfare organisations. |
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Like that of her father, almost every physical and chronological aspect of her life, from girlhood to sovereignty to extreme old age, has been filmed. |
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This will be welcomed by thousands of citizens, more so those who are eligible for old age pension, disability grants, NIS benefits and public assistance. |
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At the end, the grandpas and grandmas were treated with a belated but sumptuous Onam feast which the aged from various day care centres and old age homes in the city enjoyed. |
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Equity release is an increasingly popular way for parents to reduce the size of their estate in old age so they do not pass on a huge inheritance tax bill to their offspring. |
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Respecting and obeying one's parents, and taking care of them especially in their old age have been made a religious obligation. |
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In old age, deterioration appears in episodic memory but not in semantic memory. |
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But I'd rather be slower in my old age than a lager lout and an unfeeling bully. |
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With their young being eaten by the introduced fish, none of the razorbacks or bonytails survive to replace adults as they die of old age. |
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The death of Dobbin of old age had put an end to his master's eggling, for he had no capital with which to buy another horse. |
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He also started to paint standing up, which continued until old age, when he switched to a high chair. |
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Some Dutch writers idealized old age as a poetic transition from life to death. |
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John Doe's old age and stubborn aversion to new ideas make him a curmudgeon of a candidate. |
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He has no sons, so upon reaching old age he decides to divide his kingdom among his three daughters, Goneril, Regan and Cordelia. |
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In old age he befriended the young Edmund Gosse, whom he introduced to Shakespeare. |
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Accordingly she visits the witch, Dipsas, by whose magic aid the youth, found resting on a bank of lunary, is bewitched to sleep until old age. |
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These students were then allowed to leave and live within the community, and were welcomed back in their old age to retire in peace. |
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A GERIATRIC gym has got pensioners pumping iron to stave off ailments and the onset of old age. |
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The show picks up the 13-year-old's story as she deals with progeria, a rare condition causing old age. |
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America is in the last stage of elderliness and the beginning of the first stage of old age. |
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Tom French, a biologist with the state wildlife department, said the bird was 14, a ripe old age for a peregrine falcon. |
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Yet, in some cultures, old age begins with grandparenthood, even if this happens in one's thirties. |
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Influences of item organizability and semantic retrieval cues on word recall in very old age. |
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One retiree who had served as permanent secretary and subsequently as a minister is collecting pensions for both posts, plus an old age pension. |
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I ASSUME that the pensions which are being discussed are in addition to any old age pension to which these people are entitled. |
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As Tom writes, they will be badgering for an increase in their own old age pension eventually. |
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The state Cabinet has decided to amend the old age pension laws and eligibility conditions. |
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Roman said the old age pension raise is also a way to show the nation's grateful appreciation of the veterans' bravery, service and sacrifice. |
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He enjoyed excellent health until old age, although he became quite fat in later life. |
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Bureaucratism continues on the rise as the first-generation revolutionaries die off of old age. |
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The process of spermatogenesis takes place within the coiled seminiferous tubules, and continues from puberty to old age. |
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Indeed, by the report of our elders, this nervous preparation for old age is only trouble thrown away. |
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In undeveloped countries on the other hand, families desire children for their labour and as caregivers for their parents in old age. |
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Listening to what others say, especially to what they teach, prevents our minds stagnating, thus promoting mental growth into old age. |
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In modern times, some authors have cast doubt on whether Claudius was murdered or merely succumbed to illness or old age. |
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Service responses to the problems of old age couched in terms of housecare are clearly irrelevant to the needs of many older people. |
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However, in genuine old age he became almost blind, causing him to need sticks and a helping arm. |
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He was as trenchant a critic of his successors in his old age as he had been of his predecessors in his youth. |
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An example would be an elderly parent who moves in with his or her children due to old age. |
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In old age, Mungo became very feeble and his chin had to be set in place with a bandage. |
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Another is its ability to give rise to new epicormic and basal shoots from cut surfaces and low on its trunk, even at an old age. |
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In the simple fable about old age reconciling itself to memory and destiny, Mastroianni wears the wizened smile of a man who knows he is visiting his youth for the last time. |
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After nearly eight years at the head of the Vatican, the Pope, aged 85, has resigned unpredictably saying he is unable to carry on because of his old age and failing health. |
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Cicero's writing treats mainly of old age and personal duty. |
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When you are young the last thing on your mind is growing old, not working any more, not earning a wage, or saving for old age pensions and things like that. |
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Our intemperence it is that pulls so many several incurable diseases on our heads, that hastens old age, perverts our temperature, and brings upon us sudden death. |
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Decreases in the price of timber, increases in the cost of production, and advancing old age among the forestry population have resulted in a decline in Tokyo's output. |
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Policymakers in the Middle East are urged to shift healthcare sector priorities to include chronic disease prevention, and invest in formal systems of old age support. |
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A second attack came on the cost of the war, which, he argued, prevented overdue social reform in England, such as old age pensions and workmen's cottages. |
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Heaven Can Wait is a lengthy but frequently funny life history of an old New York skirt chaser from his brownstone puberty to his overripe old age. |
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But they didn't sing along for too long, as due to Fakhri's old age, his son Anas, who is also a singer, had to take over and sing for the crowds, as requested by his dad. |
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With these resources, Austen could provide her parents a comfortable old age, give Cassandra a permanent home and, perhaps, assist her brothers in their careers. |
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In addition, as they became adults they become a major input to the family business, mainly farming, and were the primary form of insurance for adults in old age. |
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Those that died of old age had an average lifespan of 10 to 11 years. |
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The Mundaka launches the most scathing attack on the ritual by comparing those who value sacrifice with an unsafe boat that is endlessly overtaken by old age and death. |
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He ruled entire India for 52 years, before dying of old age. |
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Pipe smoking, until recently one of the most common forms of smoking, is today often associated with solemn contemplation, old age and is often considered quaint and archaic. |
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He exercised every day to avoid becoming paunchy in his old age. |
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Unemployment benefit, sickness benefit, old age pensions, child benefit and disability benefits should always remain with the State and not a private company. |
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You might also find that a useful, old age prop is a pair of shoe lifts. |
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The show picks up the 13-year-old's story as she deals with progeria, an incredibly rare condition that causes signs of old age in young children. |
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It also gives an opportunity to the common people and those salaried employees who want to avail old age benefits by simply investing minimum of Rs 1000 in NIT pension scheme. |
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However, some may well have lived much longer, because the fossils from Frick and Trossingen are all animals that died in accidents, and not from old age. |
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