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adult
(redirected from adulthoods)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Encyclopedia 0.01 sec.

A person who by virtue of attaining a certain age, generally eighteen, is regarded in the eyes of the law as being able to manage his or her own affairs.

The age specified by law, called the legal age of majority, indicates that a person acquires full legal capacity to be bound by various documents, such as contracts and deeds, that he or she makes with others and to commit other legal acts such as voting in elections and entering marriage. The age at which a person becomes an adult varies from state to state and often varies within a state, depending upon the nature of the action taken by the person. Thus, a person wishing to obtain a license to operate a motor vehicle may be considered an adult at age sixteen, but may not reach adulthood until age eighteen for purposes of marriage, or age twenty-one for purposes of purchasing intoxicating liquors.

Anyone who has not reached the age of adulthood is legally considered an infant.


adult noun adultus, elder, fully developed person, fully grown person, grown-up person, mature person, one who has attained legal majority, person of age, person of voting age, pubes, senior
Associated concepts: adult male, adult person, adult woman, age of majority
See also: ripe

ADULT, in the civil law. An infant who, if a boy, has attained his full age of fourteen years, and if a girl, her full age of twelve. Domat, Liv. Prel. t. 2, s. 2, n. 8. In the common law an adult is considered one of full age. 1 Swanst. R. 553.



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It ends in the somehow uneasy relief of the last 20 pages, when it appears that the girls, now young women a decade older with their teens well behind them, have succeeded in turning their devastating adolescences into promising adulthoods.
The research results have shown that the participants that had past records of ill-health were in worse physical health in their adulthoods compared to the ones who had not gone through any of the mental health disorders.
These men had bad memories of fathers and grandfathers suffering, but because they had not encountered such serious cases of PC in their own adulthoods, they believed that PC no longer causes illness nor pain (Zanchetta, 2002, 2004; Zanchetta, Perreault, Kaszap, & Viens, 2007).
 
 
 
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