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Iron age   /ˈaɪərn eɪdʒ/   Listen
adjective
Iron  adj.  
1.
Of, or made of iron; consisting of iron; as, an iron bar, dust.
2.
Resembling iron in color; as, iron blackness.
3.
Like iron in hardness, strength, impenetrability, power of endurance, insensibility, etc.; as:
(a)
Rude; hard; harsh; severe. "Iron years of wars and dangers." "Jove crushed the nations with an iron rod."
(b)
Firm; robust; enduring; as, an iron constitution.
(c)
Inflexible; unrelenting; as, an iron will.
(d)
Not to be broken; holding or binding fast; tenacious. "Him death's iron sleep oppressed." Note: Iron is often used in composition, denoting made of iron, relating to iron, of or with iron; producing iron, etc.; resembling iron, literally or figuratively, in some of its properties or characteristics; as, iron-shod, iron-sheathed, iron-fisted, iron-framed, iron-handed, iron-hearted, iron foundry or iron-foundry.
Iron age.
(a)
(Myth.) The age following the golden, silver, and bronze ages, and characterized by a general degeneration of talent and virtue, and of literary excellence. In Roman literature the Iron Age is commonly regarded as beginning after the taking of Rome by the Goths, A. D. 410.
(b)
(Archaeol.) That stage in the development of any people characterized by the use of iron implements in the place of the more cumbrous stone and bronze.
Iron cement, a cement for joints, composed of cast-iron borings or filings, sal ammoniac, etc.
Iron clay (Min.), a yellowish clay containing a large proportion of an ore of iron.
Iron cross, a German, and before that Prussian, order of military merit; also, the decoration of the order.
Iron crown, a golden crown set with jewels, belonging originally to the Lombard kings, and indicating the dominion of Italy. It was so called from containing a circle said to have been forged from one of the nails in the cross of Christ.
Iron flint (Min.), an opaque, flintlike, ferruginous variety of quartz.
Iron founder, a maker of iron castings.
Iron foundry, the place where iron castings are made.
Iron furnace, a furnace for reducing iron from the ore, or for melting iron for castings, etc.; a forge; a reverberatory; a bloomery.
Iron glance (Min.), hematite.
Iron hat, a headpiece of iron or steel, shaped like a hat with a broad brim, and used as armor during the Middle Ages.
Iron horse, a locomotive engine. (Colloq.)
Iron liquor, a solution of an iron salt, used as a mordant by dyers.
Iron man (Cotton Manuf.), a name for the self-acting spinning mule.
Iron mold or Iron mould, a yellow spot on cloth stained by rusty iron.
Iron ore (Min.), any native compound of iron from which the metal may be profitably extracted. The principal ores are magnetite, hematite, siderite, limonite, Göthite, turgite, and the bog and clay iron ores.
Iron pyrites (Min.), common pyrites, or pyrite. See Pyrites.
Iron sand, an iron ore in grains, usually the magnetic iron ore, formerly used to sand paper after writing.
Iron scale, the thin film which forms on the surface of wrought iron in the process of forging. It consists essentially of the magnetic oxide of iron, Fe3O4.
Iron works, a furnace where iron is smelted, or a forge, rolling mill, or foundry, where it is made into heavy work, such as shafting, rails, cannon, merchant bar, etc.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Iron age" Quotes from Famous Books



... admissions that detract from the excellence of the elaborate portrait he has drawn of him. There was something fantastical in his favorite pursuits,—astrology, alchemy, antiquities, alphabet-making, and the like,—which the men of an iron age viewed with a contempt that probably had much to do with giving him that character which he has in history, contemporary opinion of a ruler generally being accepted, and enduring. "A species of anagram," says the English historian of his family, ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 110, December, 1866 - A Magazine of Literature, Science, Art, and Politics • Various

... very high order of ornamental art. This is still more the case with the daggers, swords, and defensive armour, often intended for the use of great chieftains, and executed with an amount of taste and feeling long since dead among the degenerate workmen of our iron age. ...
— Science in Arcady • Grant Allen

... wherefore was gold laid under our feet in the veins of the earth, but that we should contemn it, and tread upon it, and so consequently tread thrift under our feet? It was not known till the iron age, donec facinus invasit mortales, as the poet says; and the Scythians always detested it. I will prove it that an unthrift, of any, comes nearest a happy man, in so much as he comes nearest to beggary. Cicero saith, summum bonum consists in omnium ...
— A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Vol. VIII (4th edition) • Various

... urn burial of the ashes prevailed in Britain during the Age of Bronze, and co-existed with inhumation in the great cemetery of Hallstatt, surviving into the Age of Iron. [Footnote: Cf. Guide to Antiquities of Early Iron Age, British Museum, 1905, by Mr. Reginald A. Smith, under direction of Mr. Charles H. Read, for a brief account of Hallstatt culture.] Others suppose a change in Achaean ideas about the soul; it was no longer believed to haunt the grave and grave goods and ...
— Homer and His Age • Andrew Lang

... that the times which they disliked had professed to rely on Scripture alone; the times which they loved had invested the Church with equal authority. It was natural then to connect the evils of the iron age, for so they regarded it, with this notion of the sole supremacy of Scripture; and it was no less natural to associate the blessings of their imagined golden age with its avowed reverence for the Church. If they appealed only to Scripture, they echoed the language of men whom they abhorred; ...
— The Christian Life - Its Course, Its Hindrances, And Its Helps • Thomas Arnold

... are of the same opinion as the Latin poet: ferrea nunc aetas agitur. We are now living in an Iron Age, according to them; and it began in the year 3102 B.C., shortly after the great war described in the Mahabharata. The date 3102, I need hardly remark, is of no historical value, being based merely upon the theories of comparatively ...
— Hindu Gods And Heroes - Studies in the History of the Religion of India • Lionel D. Barnett

... decreed by the Fates is come, And a new frame of all things does begin; A holy progeny from heaven descends Auspicious in his birth, which puts an end To the iron age, and from which shall arise A golden ...
— Christianity and Greek Philosophy • Benjamin Franklin Cocker



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