age: [13] Age has undergone considerable transmutations and abbreviations since its beginnings in Latin. Its immediate source in English is Old French aage, which was the product of a hypothetical Vulgar Latin form *aetāticum (the t is preserved in Proven?al atge). This was based on Latin aetāt- (stem of aetās), which was a shortening of aevitās, which in turn came from aevum ‘lifetime’.
This entered English in more recognizable form in medieval, primeval, etc; it is related to Greek aión ‘age’, from which English gets aeon [17], and it can be traced back to the same root that produced (via Old Norse eí) the now archaic adverb ay(e) ‘ever’ (as in ‘will aye endure’). => aeon, aye
age (n.)
late 13c., "long but indefinite period in human history," from Old French aage (11c., Modern French age) "age; life, lifetime, lifespan; maturity," earlier edage, from Vulgar Latin *aetaticum (source of Spanish edad, Italian eta, Portuguese idade "age"), from Latin aetatem (nominative aetas), "period of life, age, lifetime, years," from aevum "lifetime, eternity, age," from PIE root *aiw- "vital force, life, long life, eternity" (see eon). Meaning "time something has lived, particular length or stage of life" is from early 14c. Used especially for "old age" since early 14c. Expelled native eld.
age (v.)
"to grow old," late 14c., from age (n.). Meaning "to make old" is early 15c. Related: Aged; aging.
例文
1. Beauty is an attitude.It has nothing to do with age .
美は年齢に関係なく態度です。
2.He knew what he wanted to do from the age of 14.
彼は14歳の時から自分が今後何をするか知っていた。
3.In some cases there is a mini-mum age limit.
最低年齢制限がある場合があります。/
4.Inhis old age he became a benefactor of the arts.