Teenage in a sentence as an adjective

I have a lot of friends who say they never would have gotten through their teenage years, or a bad turn of business, without music. 11.

I was trained during my teenage years, that it's cool to say things like that. As I'm getting older, I see how sexist and demeaning this is.

I also don't love how it makes my code look like my teenage-years C code. But I also think this is a very silly reason to adopt or not adopt a tool.

I'll say this about the new ways: I'm extremely glad that I didn't have my teenage years documented and archived. Dodged that bullet!

In the same fashion, would you like everyone to know what parking spot your teenage daughter parked in, in the back of a mall parking lot Friday night? Or where your kids go to daycare?

Anyway, a group of teenage friends on Twitter started discussing how they thought the update was lame, a waste of their time, and would Formspring please just give them something actually useful to them. Like what?

Also, our group of people contained an absolutely adorable teenage couple, everybody else was in their late twenties to mid thirties. - The whole "actual business".

Tell that to the teenage boy who just lost his family to an errant US bomb in his Afghan village and now has a massive amount of pent up rage, and nothing to lose. If the conditions are right, terrorism can always regenerate itself.

The teenage kid holding the rusted AK their parent just dropped, looking at the robot which just made them an orphan? No chance in **** that they'll be spared because they are obviously not a threat--they are a human wielding an automatic rifle, p = .975, execute.

So we can reasonably conclude that teenage auto-related deaths are falling at a faster rate than overall auto-related deaths.

And the top posters are all teenage pop stars that I've never even heard about who post completely uninteresting photos. The more Instagram turns into Facebook, the more this opens up a spot for another company to build an actual social network around photos.

My skepticism comes simply from the fact that they/he have another fully funded project on Kickstarter, one that my teenage kid could probably --with some some help from dad-- execute on in a month, and they have not delivered yet. It's like proposing that you can build a house when you haven't even demonstrated that you can build a tent.

As someone who struggled with *******, heroin and prescription opioid addictions throughout my teenage years, this resonates with me quite a bit, but I'm not sure if I agree with the conclusions the author is drawing. I got clean with no help either - and yet, many years later, I still consider myself "in recovery."

Another spent her teenage years in the foster care system and took classes at a community college to bring herself up to speed. I was the president of a student group that dealt with criminal justice reform and drug policy, and I can't count the number of students who've told me truly horrific stories of the criminal justice system and the war on *****.

The older generation of Singaporeans would deride these endeavours as mere dreams and silly teenage notions; you'd grow out of it eventually and become a doctor or executive or whatever. Hardly anyone has made a big impact internationally - whether as an athlete, artist, scientist, or entrepreneur - which meant that there were few role models for kids to look up to.

This stems from the teenage search for identity. Having made violently strong cases for their favoured console in arguments with their friends at school, they are now ideologically wedded to this position and unable to deviate from it one iota for fear of the inconsistency being seen as weakness, and more importantly, of it undermining their own fragile sense of who they are: a Playstation Fan. It's basically a microcosm of partisan politics.

This kind of lottery mentality just gives the general public the impression that there's a gold rush going on, and causes the kind of magical thinking that's similar to teenagers all hoping to become the next rock star or sports legend, or in this case, startup founder, that will make millions, focusing on the money instead of asking themselves what they want to do with their lives. For every teenage millionaire that hits the startup jackpot, there are thousands of hard-working entrepreneurs that build for the love of building.

Teenage definitions

adjective

being of the age 13 through 19; "teenage mothers"; "the teen years"

See also: adolescent teen teenaged