Lifespan in a sentence as a noun

- IE8 will have a long lifespan, although probably not as long as IE6.

So all you've got to do is monitor the status of the drives, and replace them before they get too close to their rated lifespan.

In the lifespan of those two men, humanity went from horse-and-buggy to standing on the moon.

The giant elephant in the room is being overlooked: Advertisements have a lifespan measured in months, weeks, or days.

The 12-hour lifespan of content links is interesting; it prevents indexing or hot-linking content on the site.

You're never going to build a rocket to the moon by starting in your backyard with some sheet metal - your lifespan isn't long enough if you take that approach.

Even without action by Facebook like this, it's been clear to me for ages that Upworthy's lifespan will be very, very limited.

But I've never actually drained my Pro's battery, so I'd take lighter-weight versus increased battery lifespan.

Your lawyer is going to want to have as many options available to him/her to deal with your case during it's lifespan, and admitting fault before the lawsuit even begins will limit the lawyers options when it comes to negotiations and what tactics they can use in the courtroom.

Further, most of the purported benefit standing desks is to prolong lifespan, and there's even stronger evidence that low-BMI people live longer, so the suggestion that I should gain weight and sacrifice a clinically validated approach to living longer in favor of something as novel as a standing desk is just absurd.

Lifespan definitions

noun

the period during which something is functional (as between birth and death); "the battery had a short life"; "he lived a long and happy life"

See also: life lifetime life-time