Longtime [adjective]

Definition of Longtime:

experienced, seasoned

Opposite/Antonyms of Longtime:


Sentence/Example of Longtime:

End Economic Inequality, Grow the Middle Class, Heal the Nation and the former longtime CEO of the Young & Rubicam ad agency.

Editor and longtime cannabis reform activist Tom Angell is also a good Twitter follow.

The team was led by Jude Samulski, a longtime gene therapy researcher and professor of pharmacology at UNC.

The longtime passionate wolf-watchers of Yellowstone gather just as night ends where they think wolves are likely to be.

Crystal Trull, a nonprofit consultant, is running against Sabrina Bazzo, a longtime school volunteer who is backed by the local teacher’s union.

One of them is a Mira Mesa small business owner of whom I have been a longtime customer.

If you’re a longtime local, you may remember getting to stab punch-card ballots with a metal pin.

Not only is he affable and moderate, but his longtime aide and friend is the San Diego native Chris Hansen, who managed Gardner’s campaigns for Congress and the Senate.

Then that open Assembly seat would set off an interesting scramble, which could include the chairman of the Democratic Party, Will Rodriguez-Kennedy or maybe even Gloria’s longtime aide, Nick Serrano.

A longtime Euroskeptic, he nevertheless led the Remain campaign.