Infirm in a sentence as an adjective

You might feel very, very old and infirm at 150 even if you could take pills that keep you from dying.

I was 23 years of age, and realised that my infirmities would withhold me from success in the world at large.

Young children and the infirm can be served pretty well by specialized public transport for them.

I believe that a terrible way to end up is to be essentially infirm in old age or even middle age.

Most people dislike Ensure because it's associated with the infirm and the elderly.

"wealth-transfer mechanism from the young and healthy to the elderly and infirm"What do you think insurance is?

Girls and boys, young and old, physically fit and physically infirm, poor and rich: pretty much everyone can enjoy a game.

Social security, again, has to do with a shared sense that the elderly deserve a safety net when they are too infirm to continue working.

When you eat conventionally raised cattle, you're consuming the meat of a crippling infirm animal that lived its life in appalling conditions.

"It could easily scoop up an infirm company like Research in Motion, which is valued at less than $6 billion, and drop a beautifully designed Facebook operating system on top of RIMs phones.

You are trying to paint your 80% as "percentage of people who could work, but don't" whereas it's actually "percentage of poor people in the labour force, including children and the infirm"- the overall labour force for the US is 65% of the total population.

How did they even manage in just 12 years to set up 30,000 slave labor camps, 980 concentration camps, 1,000 prisoner of war camps, 500 brothels with sex slaves and "thousands of other camps used for euthanizing the elderly and infirm ...".They must have really wanted it as a society and hundreds of thousands must have been involved, one way or another.

Would the winners be those with the biggest guns, or do Libertarians, in an attempt to belay further violence, put things to a vote and only initiate force against those who go against the vote?If I am Libertarian, but am infirm and thus unable to properly defend myself, is it Libertarian-moral to outsource my force-initiation to an outside group?

Infirm definitions

adjective

lacking bodily or muscular strength or vitality; "a feeble old woman"; "her body looked sapless"

See also: decrepit debile feeble rickety sapless weak weakly

adjective

lacking firmness of will or character or purpose; "infirm of purpose; give me the daggers" - Shakespeare