DEATH vs DECEASE: NOUN
- Cessation of life; that state of a being, animal or vegetable, in which there is a total and permanent cessation of all the vital functions, In the abstract.
- Actual.
- The termination or extinction of something.
- [In poetry and poetical prose death is often personified.
- A general mortality; a deadly plague; a fatal epidemic: as, the black death (which see, below).
- The cessation of life in a particular part of an organic body, as a bone.
- A skeleton, or the figure of a skeleton, as the symbol of mortality: as, a death's head.
- A cause, agent, or instrument of death.
- Imminent deadly peril.
- Figurative or poetical.
- Civil death.
- Execution.
- A capital offense; an offense punishable with death.
- A personification of the destroyer of life, usually represented as a skeleton holding a scythe.
- A manner of dying.
- The cause of dying.
- The state of being dead.
- The act of dying; termination of life.
- A final state
- The time when something ends
- The time at which life ends; continuing until dead
- The absence of life or state of being dead
- The permanent end of all life functions in an organism or part of an organism
- The personification of death
- The event of dying or departure from life
- Bloodshed; murder.
- A cold sweat at the coming on of death.
- A light like that of a candle, viewed by the superstitious as presaging death.
- A bell that announces a death.
- A venomous Australian snake of the family Elapidæ, of several species, as the Hoplocephalus superbus and Acanthopis antarctica.
- The separation of a man from civil society, or the debarring him from the enjoyment of civil rights, as by banishment, attainder, abjuration of the realm, entering a monastery, etc.
- See Black death, in the Vocabulary.
- Anything so dreadful as to be like death.
- Loss of spiritual life.
- Something as dreadful as death.
- The state or place of the dead.
- The mode or manner of dying.
- The act of killing
- In Scripture: The reverse of spiritual life; the mere physical and sensuous life, without any activity of the spiritual or religious nature.
- After physical death, the final doom of those who have lived and died in separation from God and the divine life.
- A slaughtering or killing.
- Murder; murderous character.
- Mortally; to death.
- Synonyms Death, Decease, Demise. See decease.
- The cessation of all vital phenomena without capability of resuscitation, either in animals or plants.
- Total privation or loss; extinction; cessation.
- Manner of dying; act or state of passing from life.
- Cause of loss of life.
- Personified: The destroyer of life, -- conventionally represented as a skeleton with a scythe.
- Danger of death.
- To be passionately fond of; have a great liking or capacity for: as, he was death on the sherry.
- Death
- Departure, especially departure from this life; death.
- Synonyms Death, Decease, Demise. Death is the common term for the ending of life. Decease is slightly euphemistic; it is less forcible and harsh than death. Demise applies primarily to a sovereign, who at death sends down or transmits his title, etc. (see quotation from Blackstone, under demise), and hence to others with reference to the transmission of their possessions. The use of demise for death apart from this idea is figurative, euphemistic, or stilted.
- Departure from life; death.
- The act of dying; death.
- The event of dying or departure from life
DEATH vs DECEASE: VERB
- N/A
- Pass from physical life and lose all all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life
DEATH vs DECEASE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To depart from this life; to die; to pass away.
- To die.
DEATH vs DECEASE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Continuing until dead
- The time at which life ends
- (idiom) (at death's door) Near to death; gravely ill or injured.
- (idiom) (be the death of) To distress or irritate to an intolerable degree.
- (idiom) (death on) Opposed to or strict about.
- (idiom) (put to death) To execute.
- (idiom) (to death) To an intolerable degree; extremely.
- (idiom) (to the death) Until one participant in a fight or struggle has died or been killed.
- Synonyms Expire, etc. See die.
- To depart from life; die.
DEATH vs DECEASE: RELATED WORDS
- Fatality, Dies, Disappearance, Dead, Died, Homicide, Murdering, Fatal, Killing, End, Last, Destruction, Decease, Demise, Dying
- Defunction, Cardiac insufficiency, Decedent, Passing, Quietus, Fatality, Demise, Deaths, Pass away, Expire, Go, Exit, Perish, Die, Death
DEATH vs DECEASE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Slain, Die, Killed, Dies, Disappearance, Dead, Died, Homicide, Murdering, Fatal, Killing, End, Last, Decease, Dying
- Flaccid paralysis, Next of kin, Cerebral thrombosis, Illness, Hypovolemic shock, Tertiary syphilis, Defunction, Cardiac insufficiency, Decedent, Passing, Deaths, Exit, Perish, Die, Death
DEATH vs DECEASE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Lawful infliction of death essay title or against its moral analysis debate about whether death punishment.
- View Benton County information about obtaining birth, death, fetal death, marriage, and divorce records.
- The pain and loss of one death cannot be wiped away by another death.
- Death Section of the Death Certificate for Injury and Poisoning.
- No other death eligibility criterion automatically authorizes death imposition.
- If by death, a certified death certificate is needed.
- Christ obedient to death, even death on a cross.
- Death certificate lists as significant cause of death or underlying cause of death.
- Included are death records, death certificate indexes, death notices and registers, obituaries, wills and probate records, and cemetery burials.
- These can include Pulaski County death certificates, local and Indiana State death registries, and the National Death Index.
- Names of injured or decease people are never to be released.
- Georgetown, where he rested from active labors until his decease.
- This event occurred due to the decease of namely Mr.
- But upon the immature and unexpected decease of Otho Ill.
- GO, affter the decease of his mother, married to Mr.
- Si inde incipieraus narrare, unde Decease erit Where, or whereat.
- Decease in any way that she may see fit.
- Nor did he find himself troubled by its decease.
- They all gathered together and prayed for the decease.
- You never feature been heedful of decease taxes.
DEATH vs DECEASE: QUESTIONS
- What happened to Polemarchus' family after his death?
- Does riding death stop the Chupacabra from spawning?
- Where do death cap mushrooms (Amanita phalloides) grow?
- Can unconscious people have near-death experiences?
- Is death by strangulation the same as death by hanging?
- How is Death personified in the poem death befalls everyone equally?
- Who is responsible for completing the cause of death on death?
- What is the death and fetal death statute of Pennsylvania?
- What do Jehovah Witnesses believe about death and death?
- Are death-related dreams closer to death than non-death-related ones?
- When is somebody decease talk to you in Your Dream?