DEAD vs GONE: NOUN
- The period exhibiting the greatest degree of intensity.
- People who have died.
- A time when coldness (or some other quality associated with death) is intense
- People who are no longer living
- N/A
DEAD vs GONE: ADJECTIVE
- Out of play. Used of a ball.
- Exact; unerring.
- Complete; utter.
- Sudden; abrupt.
- Not connected to a source of electric current.
- Not working because of a fault or breakdown.
- Lacking elasticity or bounce.
- Having grown cold; having been extinguished.
- Having no resonance. Used of sounds.
- Lacking all animation, excitement, or activity; dull.
- Devoid of human or vehicular activity; quiet.
- Not circulating or running; stagnant.
- Not commercially productive; idle.
- Physically inactive; dormant.
- No longer having significance or relevance.
- No longer in existence, use, or operation.
- Not having the capacity to produce or sustain life; barren.
- Not having the capacity to live; inanimate or inert.
- Weary and worn-out; exhausted.
- Lacking feeling or sensitivity; numb or unresponsive.
- Having the physical appearance of death.
- Marked for certain death; doomed.
- Having lost life; no longer alive.
- Not endowed with life
- Out of use or operation because of a fault or breakdown
- Not surviving in active use
- Lacking resilience or bounce
- No longer in force or use; inactive
- No longer having force or relevance
- Drained of electric charge; discharged
- Lacking animation or excitement or activity
- Not showing characteristics of life especially the capacity to sustain life; no longer exerting force or having energy or heat
- No longer having or seeming to have or expecting to have life
- Physically inactive
- Devoid of activity
- Devoid of physical sensation; numb
- Lacking acoustic resonance
- Not yielding a return
- Unerringly accurate
- No longer retained
- Destroyed or killed
- Ago (used post-positionally).
- Excellent; wonderful.
- Intoxicated to the point of being unaware of one's surroundings
- Used up.
- No longer existing, having passed.
- No longer part of the present situation.
- Away, having left.
- Pregnant.
- Infatuated.
- Carried away; absorbed.
- Ruined; lost.
- Advanced, as in illness or deterioration.
- Past; bygone.
- No longer alive; dead.
- No longer available; used up.
- No longer in existence; not part of the present.
- Missing or lost.
- Being away from a place; absent or having departed.
- Dead
- Well in the past; former
- Having all been spent
DEAD vs GONE: VERB
- N/A
- Past participle of go
DEAD vs GONE: ADVERB
- Suddenly.
- Directly; exactly.
- Absolutely; altogether.
- Quickly and without warning
- Completely and without qualification; used informally as intensifiers
- N/A
DEAD vs GONE: PREPOSITION
- N/A
- Past, after, later than (a time).
DEAD vs GONE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Used informally as intensifiers
- Nothing ever happens here"
- Discharged
- Drained of electric charge
- Complete
- Numb
- Devoid of physical sensation
- Unresponsive
- The complete stoppage of an action
- Not circulating or flowing
- (followed by `to') not showing human feeling or sensitivity; unresponsive
- On impulse; without premeditation
- Very tired
- Said of molten metal when it is thick and sluggish, either from insufficient melting, or from having stood too long in a ladle.
- In electricity, said of a circuit which is not connected with any source of electric power, either directly, or indirectly, as by induction.
- When it lacks life or resiliency.
- When it lies so near a hole that the player is “dead sure” to hole it;
- In golf, said of a ball: when it falls without rolling;
- To cause to fail in recitation: said of a teacher who puzzles a scholar.
- To make dead; deprive of life, consciousness, force, or vigor; dull; deaden.
- To make a complete failure in recitation.
- To become dead; lose life or force.
- (idiom) (over my dead body) Used to express dramatic refusal.
- (idiom) (dead to the world) Soundly asleep.
- (idiom) (dead to rights) In the very act of making an error or committing a crime.
- (idiom) (dead in the water) Unable to function or move.
- (idiom) (dead and buried) No longer in use or under consideration.
- Former
- Well in the past
- Used up or no longer available
- Drained of energy or effectiveness; extremely tired; completely exhausted
- Stupefied or excited by a chemical substance (especially alcohol)
- P. p. of go.
- In archery, wide of the mark or beyond bounds: said of an arrow.
- Characterized by a sinking sensation, as if about to faint; weak and faint: as, a gone feeling.
- Lapsed; lost; hopeless; beyond recovery: in a gone case and similar phrases.
DEAD vs GONE: RELATED WORDS
- Departed, Deadened, Extinguished, Pulseless, Suddenly, Barren, Numb, Asleep, Extinct, Assassinated, Stillborn, Lifeless, Deceased, Murdered, Slain
- Bygone, Asleep, Deceased, Away, Foregone, Absent, Dead, Expended, Destroyed, Exhausted, Past, Kaput, Spent, Departed, Lost
DEAD vs GONE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Departed, Deadened, Extinguished, Pulseless, Suddenly, Barren, Numb, Asleep, Extinct, Assassinated, Stillborn, Lifeless, Deceased, Murdered, Slain
- Bygone, Asleep, Deceased, Away, Foregone, Absent, Dead, Expended, Destroyed, Exhausted, Past, Kaput, Spent, Departed, Lost
DEAD vs GONE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The cross represents a dead Jesus Christ who never resurrected, when Jesus did in fact resurrect from the dead.
- Does the Summertime Dead Period Policy prohibit participation in a National level tournament during the dead period?
- The Walking Dead, Fear the Walking Dead and The Walking Dead: World Beyond.
- Can be column dead volume or chromatography system dead volume.
- Switch to have a dead offer code is an island off the grateful dead to use.
- Dead Front Axle: Dead axles are those axles, which donet rotate.
- In Sheikh Wasan, survivors watched as a woman staggered around blindly, clutching her dead child, and not realizing it was dead.
- Brandon Aiyuk was the best dead value in the WR dead zone.
- Day of the Dead is a celebratory holiday to remember the dead.
- Jordan Valley here, and then the Dead Sea which is truly dead.
- These things of the past are gone forever.
- Blair County Reassessment values have gone into effect.
- Great looking table, though should have gone bigger!
- Reportedly about road rage gone out of control.
- Their income may have gone down through a job loss or their expenses may have gone up from a large medical bill.
- But what was shocking to me, as an American, as someone who has gone to sea, gone to war that that could even happen.
- After receiving prayer, the veins in her legs were gone and the bumps of the veins were gone as well.
- Adjustable mortgage rates have gone up a little since last Sunday, but fixed mortgage rates have gone down.
- Dismissal means the case is gone, and the bankruptcy protection is gone.
- What will this be like for Sadie while we are gone, and for the other cats when we are gone or she is gone?
DEAD vs GONE: QUESTIONS
- Why did the dead start walking in The Walking Dead?
- Is fearfear The Walking Dead the biggest Walking Dead spinoff yet?
- Is fearfear The Walking Dead a spin off of The Walking Dead?
- What is the Walking Dead spin-off a Walking Dead about?
- Can animals come back from the dead in The Walking Dead?
- What are the difficulty settings for Red Dead Red Dead Revolver?
- How many Walking Dead characters have moved to fear The Walking Dead?
- How similar are The Walking Dead and Danny Boyle's 'Walking Dead' opening?
- What does it mean to 'let the dead bury their dead'?
- Is the Grateful Dead still called dead and Company?
- What has gone wrong with insider diversity measures?
- What has gone wrong with multiculturalism in Germany?
- How to fix Facebook notifications that gone missing?
- Where has Deben transport gone into administration?
- Why has Norton Motorcycles gone into administration?
- Why has McAleese gone into voluntary administration?
- Is it'I have gone through'or'I've been gone through'?
- What movies should I watch if I like Gone Baby Gone?
- What song does Igor sample in Gone Gone Gone thank you?
- When did Glen Campbell's she's Gone Gone Gone Gone?