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The phrase "age privilege" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in discussions about social dynamics, inequalities, or advantages that individuals may experience based on their age.
Example: "In many workplaces, younger employees may experience age privilege, as they are often perceived as more adaptable and tech-savvy."
Alternatives: "age-based advantage" or "youth privilege".
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A dozen city blocks separate the imposing tawny-brick Carnegie building up on the hill from the pump house beside the Monongahela — blocks that descend with the slope from Gilded Age privilege to post-industrial urban decay.
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In last week's Sunday New York Times, a top story above the fold, In New Age of Privilege, Not all Are in Same Boat, trumpeted the new Gilded Age.
Its days probably lie in the past, as cricket loses more of its prelapsarian integrity in a commercial age and privileges what Hans scornfully calls "that baseball-like business of slugging and hoisting" over the idea of an "innings as a chanceless progression of orthodox shots".
While age-based privilege is a complicated concept - both young and old people can be targets of discrimination - younger voters have to worry much more than older voters about "what happens over the span of decades if [they] keep voting for increasingly right-wing Democrats".
In a wiki-age that privileges the collective over the personal, Christian suggests, we have become tone deaf to the difference between the human voice and the chatbot voice.
"Old age was the privilege of rocks and trees," she wrote.
Born into Gilded Age wealth and privilege, Stephen Carlton Clark and Robert Sterling Clark were among four brothers whose paternal grandfather, Edward Clark, was a founder of what became the Singer Sewing Machine Company.
Waugh's best-known work, "Brideshead Revisited," was a reverie about a vanished age of Oxford privilege, titled Catholic families, large country houses and fastidious conscience.
In the earlier age of unapologetic privilege, a man making $20 million a year wouldn't have had to bother with such things -- members of the having classes simply put their sons down at birth for Groton or Eton.
This kind of criticism is a product of our "check your privilege" age, but it undermines the plain fact that this show tells the sort of women's stories that are rarely, if ever, seen on our screens.
Living in the digital age is a privilege.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com