Retiring in a sentence as an adjective

Rest assured, I have no plans on retiring from keeping the blog going -- it's what got me here in the first place!

While you are at it, how about fixing/retiring the following things as well:- Endorsements.

If you go back 50 or 100 years, people didn't sit around for 20 or 30 years after retiring doing nothing - they simply died earlier.

He should have saved far more money before retiring -- but my point is that even at the point he retired he was in decent financial shape.

"> ...> Last year, Apple announced that Mansfield would be retiring, but several months later announced he would instead be staying at the company.

Is she officially retiring from any and all digital correspondence contrary to her notice that "[her] email [addresses] still work"?

> To better focus our efforts and to align them with the needs of our global member base, we will be retiring the public API programWhat a sad statement, there is no need for this corporate-drone talk.

> "Americans are moving far less often than in the past, and when they do migrate it is typically no longer from places with low wages to places with higher wages"Might have something to do with the aging population and baby boomers retiring.

In the words of the former CS61a teacher, Brian Harvey, who's retiring [1]:"In an ironic development, while the Berkeley CS faculty pretty clearly regard the Python-based course as the future of 61A for Berkeley CS students, both the UC Online people and the team at Stanford developing technology for massive online courses are excited about adapting 61AS to their formats.

Retiring definitions

adjective

not arrogant or presuming; "unassuming to a fault, skeptical about the value of his work"; "a shy retiring girl"

See also: unassuming

adjective

of a person who has held and relinquished a position or office; "a retiring member of the board"

adjective

reluctant to draw attention to yourself

See also: reticent self-effacing