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Example sentences for "early age"

  • He may freely reject inferior birds, as they serve at an early age as excellent food.

  • Chickens feather late but the young cocks show their masculine characters, and crow at an early age.

  • Paget, and he has come to the conclusion that the degree of regrowth in this case is not greater than sometimes occurs with normal bones, especially with the humerus, when amputated at an early age.

  • Thus the improved breeds arrive at maturity at an early age, as has been well shown by Mr. Simonds through their early average period of dentition.

  • Removing at an early age to Paris he began as clerk to a paint-dealer who was from Mayenne and a distant relative of the Orgemonts.

  • He died at an early age of cholera, leaving a widow and children for whom the Dowager Marquise d'Aiglemont showed little love.

  • At an early age he began to write romances, and continued his production with such industry that his works reach to 100 vols.

  • Saltoun, East Lothian, to which estate he succeeded at an early age.

  • She won prizes and medals at an early age, and became famous through many concert tours, partly alone and partly in company with the violinist Sarasate.

  • Born at Baltimore, she showed a taste for music at an early age, and was able to read and write notes when only seven.

  • Pursuing the usual studies, harmony with Reicha, and piano with Hummel and Moscheles, she began to write ambitious works at an early age.

  • The seedlings were thinned at an early age, so that twenty plants were left in each of the three divisions.

  • In Pot 3 both the crossed plants were killed at an early age by some animal, so that the self-fertilised had no competitors.

  • But some flowers of the Painted Lady, castrated at an early age, were fertilised with pollen from the Purple sweet-pea; and it should be remembered that these varieties differ in nothing except in the colour of their flowers.

  • Footnote: German examples of burning the amis of the cremated dead and then burying them are given by Mr. Ridgeway, Early Age of Greece, vol.

  • Christian parents in the year 1860 and at an early age placed in the common schools of his native town.

  • Having lost his father at an early age, he subsequently experienced some difficulty in remaining in school.

  • When but five years old his parents settled in Baltimore, where he was sent at an early age to the St. Mary's Academy.

  • At an early age he evinced a remarkable aptitude for public affairs, and at school showed proficiency of the highest order in such studies as political economy, civil government, history, literature.

  • At an early age he was placed in a Roman Catholic School.

  • Allowed to visit the Continent at an early age, "these lapwings, that go from under the wing of their dam with the shell on their heads, run wild.

  • There was no necessity for their getting the French accent at an early age, "as if we had no mind to be suspected to be Englishmen.

  • They sent their sons to Oxford or Cambridge at an early age, and if the striplings did not immediately lay hold on philosophy, declared that they had no aptitude for learning, and removed them to a dancing school.

  • She grew up a bright, lively, and beautiful child, and was conscious from an early age of the value of her talents.

  • Born in 1703, of humble Neapolitan parentage, he became a pupil of Porpora at an early age.

  • Born in 1770 in the English capital, she was most carefully trained in music from an early age, and her gifts displayed themselves so manifestly as to give assurance of that brilliant future which made her the admiration of her times.

  • It is not surprising, therefore, that he left school at an early age to engage in actual work in railroad shops.

  • This is why many parents either refuse their children the advantages of an education and insist upon their going to work at an early age, or compel them to take a hated schooling.

  • But for our cosmetics, wrinkles would be formed at an early age.

  • Previous to the late legislative act, the tender youth of both sexes were at an early age consigned to the coal pit, and obliged to labour beyond their feeble strength, in circumstances ill adapted to their years.

  • He went to Oriel College, Oxford, at an early age, and gained high praise for the quickness and precocity of his talents.

  • From the usual habits of the Franks, it is also probable that he accompanied Pepin in his campaigns at an early age; but the first time that we really see him in the field, is on the renewal of the war with the rebellious Duke of Aquitaine.

  • Duped perhaps I was myself: and it was natural that I should be so under the overwhelming influences oppressing any right that I could have at my early age to a free, independent judgment.

  • He received lessons in music at an early age, and his talent was unmistakable.

  • His father, a clever amateur, had him taught music at an early age, and when only nine years of age he played in a concert at Genoa with triumphant success.

  • To this sacred spot Leelinau had made her way at an early age, gathering strange flowers and plants, which she would bring home to her parents, and relate to them all the haps and mishaps that had occurred in her rambles.

  • To the scene of the wide open prairie his grandmother sent him at an early age to watch.

  • Three brothers were left destitute, by the death of their parents, at an early age.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "early age" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    adjourned meeting; early age; early breakfast; early childhood; early date; early dawn; early death; early development; early example; early marriage; early marriages; early morn; early period; early settlement; early settler; early spring; early stage; early times; early work; early writers; early youth; fair means; much celebrated; ordinary matter; religious thought; sexual life