Inter alia, a piece from the Times about growing old suggests:
Not sure where the age-specific references come from ... as I recall, both of these are just 'late in life' sorts of things which could mean pretty much anything after, say, 18, relatively speaking ...
Cato took up Greek at 80. Plutarch was not much younger when he started learning Latin.
Not sure where the age-specific references come from ... as I recall, both of these are just 'late in life' sorts of things which could mean pretty much anything after, say, 18, relatively speaking ...
