(For a person or an animal) Having lived for a relatively long period of time.
1For another, she'd thought she was too long in the tooth herself.
2I'm getting a little long in the tooth to worry about children.
3She was a bit long in the tooth but in good shape overall.
4Ah, but he was getting too long in the tooth for this game.
5Hurl now saw that each was also rather long in the tooth as well.
6All over the hill, long in the tooth, and nothing special to look at.
7I'm a bit long in the tooth for that now.
8But we're all getting a bit long in the tooth.
9UNLIKE most pop dinosaurs, the Bee Gees have always been long in the tooth.
10I'm a little long in the tooth for the Bieb.
11The global economic upswing is long in the tooth.
12What he meant was, she was getting long in the tooth to have a baby.
13She ain't exactly long in the tooth now.
14It makes sense because the Murcielago, introduced in 2001, is getting a bit long in the tooth.
15In the last years of his life, of course, he'd been a little long in the tooth.
16Sorina was too long in the tooth to think that she loved Amagê -shehardly knew her.