decade
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++dec·ade /ˈdekeɪd, deˈkeɪd/ ●●● W1 AWL noun [countable] TMCa period of 10 years 十年;十年期
Examples from the Corpus
decade• I've been at the top in television for a decade, you see, Blanche.• By the end of a decade, it requires artificial means of life support.• In Gwinnett County, Ga., a boom that began more than a decade ago continues with no end in sight.• But because of their longevity they are expected to go on damaging the ozone layer for decades.• For decades, townspeople thought his childhood home was a three-story rowhouse near the market square, now a porcelain shop.• The remaining web of streets was due for redevelopment - the standard solution to housing decay in the last couple of decades.• The decade could hardly have ended on a more optimistic note.• Such brilliant slickness kept our eyes trained on him for three decades.Origin decade (1400-1500) French décade, from Greek dekas, from deka “ten”dec·ade nounChineseSyllable
Corpus of a years 10 period
decade
dec‧ade W2 AC /ˈdekeɪd, deˈkeɪd/
noun [countable]
dec‧ade W2 AC /ˈdekeɪd, deˈkeɪd/
noun [countable] Date: 1400-1500
Language: French
Origin: décade, from Greek dekas, from deka 'ten'
a period of 10 years
Language: French
Origin: décade, from Greek dekas, from deka 'ten'