• Climacteric

    Pronunciation

    • UK IPA: /klʌɪmakˈtɛɹɪk/, /klʌɪˈmaktəɹɪk/

    Origin

    From Latin clīmactēricus, from Hellenistic Ancient Greek κλιμακτηρικός ("scale, progression, gradation").

    Full definition of climacteric

    Adjective

    climacteric

    1. Pertaining to any of several supposedly critical years of a person's life. from 17th c.
      • 1971, Keith Thomas, Religion and the Decline of Magic, Folio Society 2012, p. 596:Closely parallel to the belief in unlucky days was the notion of climacteric years, those periodic dates in a man's life which were potential turning-points in his health and fortune.
    2. Critical or crucial; decisive. from 17th c.
    3. (medicine) Relating to a period of physiological change during middle age; especially, menopausal. from 18th c.
    4. Climactic. from 18th c.

    Noun

    climacteric

    (plural climacterics)
    1. A critical stage or decisive point; a turning point. from 17th c.
      • SoutheyIt is your lot, as it was mine, to live during one of the grand climacterics of the world.
      • , p. 66-67.He was in his grand climacterick, with a florid brow, and a step like youthful agility. Sigourney, Lydia.
      • Burke, Edmund. , p. 52.I should hardly yield my rigid fibers to be regenerated by them; nor begin, in my grand climacteric, to squall in their new accents, or to stammer, in my second cradle, the elemental sounds of their barbarous metaphysics.
    2. A period in human life in which some great change is supposed to take place, calculated in different ways by different authorities (often identified as every seventh or ninth year). from 17th c.
    3. (medicine) The period of life that leads up to and follows the end of menstruation in women; the menopause. from 18th c.
      • 1998, Smith, Roger N J, and Studd, John W. W., The Menopause and Hormone Replacement Therapy, p. 8:Once women have traversed the turmoil of the climacteric years and reached the hormonal steady-state of the post-menopause, there is almost certainly no increase in the incidence of depression.
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