Retire in a sentence as a verb

Roberts had grown so rich, he wanted to retire.

Their plan was to retire early at 55-60 and then travel the world once kids were grown.

People think the path to retirement starts with lattes and cable.

What were you paying for Chrome Frame?Sometimes, it makes sense to retire products.

If you do manage to land one, don't assume it will actually be there for you when you retire.

This assumes a saving period from the age of 30 to 60 and retirement from 60 to 90.

* Dan says he thought if they weren't doing the show anymore, they would retire it together.

There's a genuine question: where would the money come from to give someone a retirement at 50?

To come back down to earth, it's really crappy that we can't have the same retirement age that we used to have.

The real Roberts has been retired 15 years and living like a king in Patagonia.

The strategy of waiting for them to retire or whatever doesn't seem to be paying off.

She needs to retire and enjoy the roughly $100 million she has acquired in a life of "public service".

Essentially, we would need a tax of 40% for people to be able to retire at 50 and replace their income for life.

That's one of reasons the average American nearing retirement has less than $100,000 saved.

Or does he write a book and retire?I have absolutely no perspective on this issue and often wonder what it's like.

You've made so much money you could retire, buy an island, and still have enough left over to turn it into a supervillain lair!

That means higher taxes, raising the retirement age, or putting more onus on the individual to save for retirement.

However, I'm not sure how to go about talking about retirement ages without talking about the money we need to support it.

The business consisted of two senior citizens who wanted to retire.

Maybe it's time we raised social security taxes realizing that we don't care as much about iPhones as we do about our retirement.

"Man, I can't even stop paying $4 a day for coffee..." How likely is that guy to focus on things that actually matter, like setting up an automated draw from his checking account into his retirement account?

Effectively, everyone is already doing an early retirement, compared to people 50 years ago.

The notion of area has confused hordes of scientists; it is time to retire it from common use and replace it with the more effective one of circumference.

If you put your head down and work hard, taking no vacations, until you're age 65, then you **** 180 degrees in the other direction and retire into a life of full-time leisure.

The additional money per year could go toward providing an earlier retirement via individual means.

Set up a system that automatically deposits a portion of your paycheck into your savings, investment, and retirement accounts.

Note I barely have any actual work experience at this point, I've only shown boundless ambition and a willingness to wait for senior people to retire so I can take their position.

For the rest of my time, people would bring me trivially broken electronics and I would retire for the evening to make it out like I was doing something difficult, then return the fixed item the next day.

Should we lock people into the standard of care at the year of their retirement with newer, more expensive treatments unavailable to them?There's just a big money issue when it comes to retirement age that's hard to ignore.

Maybe we should have a lower retirement age for certain professions along with higher social security and medicare taxes on jobs in those professions.--I can't imagine how hard it is to lose a parent so young.

"Become millionaires" sounds a lot sexier than "Will be adequately prepared for retirement when they're 65".If you have a full career in any white-collar profession and don't have a million dollars between your 401k, home equity, IRA and other savings when you retire, you spent too many years living too wastefully.

Retire definitions

verb

go into retirement; stop performing one's work or withdraw from one's position; "He retired at age 68"

verb

withdraw from active participation; "He retired from chess"

See also: withdraw

verb

pull back or move away or backward; "The enemy withdrew"; "The limo pulled away from the curb"

See also: withdraw retreat recede

verb

withdraw from circulation or from the market, as of bills, shares, and bonds

verb

break from a meeting or gathering; "We adjourned for lunch"; "The men retired to the library"

See also: adjourn withdraw

verb

make (someone) retire; "The director was retired after the scandal"

verb

dispose of (something no longer useful or needed); "She finally retired that old coat"

verb

lose interest; "he retired from life when his wife died"

See also: withdraw

verb

cause to be out on a fielding play

verb

cause to get out; "The pitcher retired three batters"; "the runner was put out at third base"

verb

prepare for sleep; "I usually turn in at midnight"; "He goes to bed at the crack of dawn"