postboomer

English

Etymology

From post- +‎ boomer.

Adjective

postboomer (comparative more postboomer, superlative most postboomer)

  1. After the baby boomers.
    • 2009 January 25, Michael Winerip, “They Warned You About Us”, in New York Times[1]:
      “Boomer” has gotten such a bum rap that even our new president, who is a clear-cut boomer demographically (the boom years ran through 1964), has sought to link himself to a younger generation with a postboomer mentality, one that types with its thumbs to communicate and is not tainted by the cultural wars of the 1960s.

Noun

postboomer (plural postboomers)

  1. One born after the baby boomers.