LAST vs DEATH: NOUN
- Power of holding out; endurance; stamina.
- A load of some commodity with reference to its weight and commercial value; hence, a particular weight or measure, varying in amount in different localities and for different commodities.
- A burden; a load; a cargo.
- Fault.
- A wooden pattern or model of the human foot, on which shoes are formed.
- A unit of volume or weight varying for different commodities and in different districts, equal to about 80 bushels, 640 gallons, or 2 tons.
- The final mention or appearance.
- The end.
- One that is at the end or last.
- A block or form shaped like a human foot and used in making or repairing shoes.
- The temporal end; the concluding time
- The time at which life ends; continuing until dead
- The concluding parts of an event or occurrence
- The last or lowest in an ordering or series
- A unit of weight equal to 4,000 pounds
- A unit of capacity for grain equal to 80 bushels
- Holding device shaped like a human foot that is used to fashion or repair shoes
- A person's dying act; the last thing a person can do
- 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.
- Murder; murderous character.
- Danger of death.
- Personified: The destroyer of life, -- conventionally represented as a skeleton with a scythe.
- Cause of loss of life.
- Manner of dying; act or state of passing from life.
- Total privation or loss; extinction; cessation.
- The cessation of all vital phenomena without capability of resuscitation, either in animals or plants.
- Synonyms Death, Decease, Demise. See decease.
- Mortally; to death.
- To be passionately fond of; have a great liking or capacity for: as, he was death on the sherry.
- A slaughtering or killing.
- After physical death, the final doom of those who have lived and died in separation from God and the divine life.
- In Scripture: The reverse of spiritual life; the mere physical and sensuous life, without any activity of the spiritual or religious nature.
- Something as dreadful as death.
- The mode or manner of dying.
- The state or place of the dead.
- A capital offense; an offense punishable with death.
- Imminent deadly peril.
- A cause, agent, or instrument of death.
- A skeleton, or the figure of a skeleton, as the symbol of mortality: as, a death's head.
- The cessation of life in a particular part of an organic body, as a bone.
- A general mortality; a deadly plague; a fatal epidemic: as, the black death (which see, below).
- [In poetry and poetical prose death is often personified.
- Figurative or poetical.
- Actual.
- 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.
- The termination or extinction of something.
- Civil death.
- Execution.
- Bloodshed; murder.
- 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
- The act of killing
LAST vs DEATH: ADJECTIVE
- Administered just before death.
- Of or relating to a terminal period or stage, as of life.
- Used as an intensive.
- Being the latest possible.
- The least desirable or suitable.
- Least likely or expected.
- Most valid, authoritative, or conclusive.
- Highest in extent or degree; utmost.
- Most up-to-date; newest.
- Just past; most recent.
- Being the only one left.
- Being, coming, or placed after all others; final.
- Occurring at or forming an end or termination
- In accord with the most fashionable ideas or style
- Not to be altered or undone
- Conclusive in a process or progression
- Coming after all others in time or space or degree or being the only one remaining
- Lowest in rank or importance
- Occurring at the time of death
- Most unlikely or unsuitable
- Highest in extent or degree
- N/A
LAST vs DEATH: VERB
- Continue to live; endure or last
- Persist or be long; in time
- N/A
LAST vs DEATH: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To persist or endure for the entire length of; survive.
- To keep adequately supplied.
- To remain in adequate supply.
- To continue in force or practice.
- To remain in good or usable condition.
- To continue; survive.
- To continue in time; go on.
- N/A
LAST vs DEATH: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To mold or shape on a last.
- N/A
LAST vs DEATH: ADVERB
- At the end; finally.
- Most recently.
- After all others in chronology or sequence.
- The item at the end
- More recently than any other time
- N/A
LAST vs DEATH: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Continue to live through hardship or adversity
- Continuing until dead
- The time at which life ends
- The final thing a person can do
- A person's dying act
- The concluding time
- The temporal end
- A person's dying act; the final thing a person can do
- Continue to live and avoid dying
- Persist for a specified period of time
- Immediately past
- For the last time; on the last occasion before the present time.
- In conclusion; finally; lastly.
- At the end of the series; after all others.
- To find fault with; blame.
- To continue unimpaired; remain fresh, unfaded, or unspoiled; continue to be available or serviceable; wear well: as, this color will last.
- To hold out; continue unexhausted or unconsumed; escape failure or loss.
- To continue to be; remain in existence; continue in progress.
- To extend; reach.
- To follow out; carry out; perform; do.
- To form on or by a last; fit to a last, as the materials for a boot or shoe.
- (idiom) (at long last) After a lengthy or troublesome wait or delay.
- (idiom) (at last) After a considerable length of time; finally.
- Continuing until dead
- The time at which life ends
- (idiom) (to the death) Until one participant in a fight or struggle has died or been killed.
- (idiom) (to death) To an intolerable degree; extremely.
- (idiom) (put to death) To execute.
- (idiom) (death on) Opposed to or strict about.
- (idiom) (be the death of) To distress or irritate to an intolerable degree.
- (idiom) (at death's door) Near to death; gravely ill or injured.
LAST vs DEATH: RELATED WORDS
- Latter, Close, Concluding, Finale, Finish, Latest, Lowest, Finally, End, Penultimate, Worst, Final, Late, Later, Past
- Fatality, Dies, Disappearance, Dead, Died, Homicide, Murdering, Fatal, Killing, End, Last, Destruction, Decease, Demise, Dying
LAST vs DEATH: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unlikely, Latter, Close, Concluding, Finale, Finish, Latest, Lowest, End, Penultimate, Worst, Final, Late, Later, Past
- Slain, Die, Killed, Dies, Disappearance, Dead, Died, Homicide, Murdering, Fatal, Killing, End, Last, Decease, Dying
LAST vs DEATH: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The last to exercise that authority was Jimmy Carter; the last to receive it was Ronald Reagan.
- This Addendum is effective upon receipt of the last approval necessary and the affixing of the last signaturerequired.
- Login cookies last for two days, and screen options cookies last for a year.
- Lenders commonly request anywhere from the last three months to the last three years of bank statements.
- Agents that are growing know how many quotes they received today, yesterday, this week, last week, last quarter; well, you get the picture.
- Over the last ten years we have produced more plastic than during the whole of the last century.
- The licence will last for five years from the date the HMO was last registered.
- Act, was proposed last year and was introduced by Congress last week.
- Yeah, so last, as Mike stated, last fiscal year, we had four schools in First Day Complete.
- The search continues for a missing Atlanta mom last seen in South Florida last month.
- 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.
LAST vs DEATH: QUESTIONS
- When was the last time Patriots played Thanksgiving?
- How long does trichomoniasis last without treatment?
- When was Australia consumer confidence Last updated?
- How long do synchronized swimming competitions last?
- How long does cheesecake last without refrigeration?
- How long do Thanksgiving Leftovers *actually* last?
- How long does postpartum depression last untreated?
- How long does professional woodwork treatment last?
- When was the last time Ottawa had the last draft pick?
- How to display last logged in users and system last reboot date?
- 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?