springtime+of+life
11Humanism (life stance) — See also philosophical Humanism : For the Renaissance liberal arts movement, see Renaissance humanismHumanism is a comprehensive life stance that upholds human reason, ethics, and justice, and rejects supernaturalism, pseudoscience, and… …
12prime of life — n. best part of one s life; adulthood; springtime of one s life …
13juvenility — Synonyms and related words: adolescence, bloom, budtime, early years, florescence, flowering time, greenness, jeunesse, juvenescence, my burning youth, my green age, prime of life, puberty, pubescence, salad days, seedtime of life, spring,… …
14May — May1 [mā] n. [OFr mai < L ( mensis) Maius, (month) of Maius: see MAIA] 1. the fifth month of the year, having 31 days: abbrev. M or My 2. a) springtime b) the springtime of life; youth; prime 3. [m ] …
15prime — [prīm] adj. [ME < MFr < L primus, first < OL pri, before < IE base * per , beyond > FAR, FIRST] 1. first in time; original; primitive; primary 2. first in rank or authority; chief [the prime minister] 3. first in importance or… …
16spring|time — «SPRIHNG TYM», noun. 1. the season of spring: »Flowers bloom in the springtime. 2. Figurative. the first or earliest period: »the springtime of life …
17adolescence — n. Youth, juvenility, minority, juniority, nonage, teens, springtime of life, dayspring of life, adolescency, growing, growing time, period of growth, growing up, prime of life, flower of life, bloom of life …
18youth — n 1. childhood, early life, salad days, boyhood, girlhood; adolescence, teens, teenage, teen years, pubescence; minority, nonage; heyday, springtime of life, bloom or flower of life, golden season of life, day spring of life; immaturity, growing… …
19adolescence — n 1. youth, teens, teenage, teen years, pubescence; boyhood, girlhood, minority, nonage; heyday, rising generation, flower of youth, springtime of life, bloom or flower of life, golden season of life, dayspring of life. 2. immaturity, growing… …
20Iroquois — • A noted confederacy of five, and afterwards six, cognate tribes of Iroquoian stock, and closely cognate languages, formerly occupying central New York, and claiming right of conquest over nearly all the tribes from Hudson Bay to Tennessee River …