genarian

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English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

Back-formation from sexagenarian, septuagenarian, octogenarian, and so on.

Noun[edit]

genarian (plural genarians)

  1. An elderly person, especially one over the age of 60.
    • 1955, Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe, Sundown; Later and Earlier Selected Poems, page 71:
      Let all the genarians pass in review — The procession will last but a minute or two.
    • 1994 September 19, Gerry Goldstein, “Maurice Browning thrives and grows, just like his garden”, in Providence Journal-Bulletin:
      His garden is an expansive project for an octogenarian, or any kind of genarian.
    • 2008, Elaine Bernstein Partnow, Judith Partnow Hyman, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Your True Age, →ISBN, page 41:
      At the other end of the spectrum, several genarians had physical fitness AQs down in the 30s!
    • 2014, Carolyn Mathews, Squaring Circles, →ISBN:
      The only reference I made to his age, was the dedication on his card: To my sexy genarian.
Synonyms[edit]

Etymology 2[edit]

genus +‎ -arian

Adjective[edit]

genarian (not comparable)

  1. (philosophy) Concerning rules or principles as opposed to acts.
    • 1979, Peter Schröder, Leonard Nelson Symposium, page 90:
      This distinguishes his position from that of rule-utilitarians like Brandt, with whom Hare otherwise largely agrees, and makes Hare an actarian in my sense rather than a genarian.
    • 1982, J. H. Wellbank, Denis Snook, David T. Mason, John Rawls & His Critics: An Annotated Bibliography, page 187:
      Rawls' s theory is genarian (the Method is used to derive rules, principles, which in turn are applied to acts) rather than actarian (the Method applied directly to acts).

Anagrams[edit]