Found 11 hits - Term: dead, Database: *, Strategy: exact
- [1] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
sainted \saint"ed\, a.
1. consecrated; sacred; holy; pious. "a most sainted king."
--shak.
1913 webster
amongst the enthroned gods on sainted seats.
--milton.
1913 webster
2. entered into heaven; -- a euphemism for dead.
1913 webster
see also:
dead
- [2] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
dead \dead\ de^d, a. oe. ded, dead, deed, as. de'ad; akin
to os. d=od, d. dood, g. todt, tot, icel. dauethr, sw.
dan. d"od, goth. daubs; prop. p. p. of an old verb meaning
to die. see die, and cf. death.
1. deprived of life; -- opposed to alive and living;
reduced to that state of a being in which the organs of
motion and life have irrevocably ceased to perform their
functions; as, a dead tree; a dead man. "the queen, my
lord, is dead." --shak.
1913 webster
the crew, all except himself, were dead of hunger.
--arbuthnot.
1913 webster
seek him with candle, bring him dead or living.
--shak.
1913 webster
2. destitute of life; inanimate; as, dead matter.
1913 webster
3. resembling death in appearance or quality; without show of
life; deathlike; as, a dead sleep.
1913 webster
4. still as death; motionless; inactive; useless; as, dead
calm; a dead load or weight.
1913 webster
5. so constructed as not to transmit sound; soundless; as, a
dead floor.
1913 webster
6. unproductive; bringing no gain; unprofitable; as, dead
capital; dead stock in trade.
1913 webster
7. lacking spirit; dull; lusterless; cheerless; as, dead eye;
dead fire; dead color, etc.
1913 webster
8. monotonous or unvaried; as, a dead level or pain; a dead
wall. "the ground is a dead flat." --c. reade.
1913 webster
9. sure as death; unerring; fixed; complete; as, a dead shot;
a dead certainty.
1913 webster
i had them a dead bargain. --goldsmith.
1913 webster
10. bringing death; deadly. --shak.
1913 webster
11. wanting in religious spirit and vitality; as, dead faith;
dead works. "dead in trespasses." --eph. ii. 1.
1913 webster
12. paint.
a flat; without gloss; -- said of painting which has
been applied purposely to have this effect.
b not brilliant; not rich; thus, brown is a dead color,
as compared with crimson.
1913 webster
13. law cut off from the rights of a citizen; deprived of
the power of enjoying the rights of property; as, one
banished or becoming a monk is civilly dead.
1913 webster
14. mach. not imparting motion or power; as, the dead
spindle of a lathe, etc. see spindle.
1913 webster
15. elec. carrying no current, or producing no useful
effect; -- said of a conductor in a dynamo or motor, also
of a telegraph wire which has no instrument attached and,
therefore, is not in use.
webster 1913 suppl.
16. out of play; regarded as out of the game; -- said of a
ball, a piece, or a player under certain conditions in
cricket, baseball, checkers, and some other games.
in golf, a ball is said to lie dead when it lies
so near the hole that the player is certain to hole
it in the next stroke. --encyc. of
sport.
webster 1913 suppl.
dead ahead naut., directly ahead; -- said of a ship or
any object, esp. of the wind when blowing from that point
toward which a vessel would go.
dead angle mil., an angle or space which can not be seen
or defended from behind the parapet.
dead block, either of two wooden or iron blocks intended to
serve instead of buffers at the end of a freight car.
dead calm naut., no wind at all.
dead center, or dead point mach., either of two points
in the orbit of a crank, at which the crank and connecting
rod lie a straight line. it corresponds to the end of a
stroke; as, a and b are dead centers of the crank
mechanism in which the crank c drives, or is driven by,
the lever l.
dead color paint., a color which has no gloss upon it.
dead coloring oil paint., the layer of colors, the
preparation for what is to follow. in modern painting this
is usually in monochrome.
dead door shipbuilding, a storm shutter fitted to the
outside of the quarter-gallery door.
dead flat naut., the widest or midship frame.
dead freight mar. law, a sum of money paid by a person
who charters a whole vessel but fails to make out a full
cargo. the payment is made for the unoccupied capacity.
--abbott.
dead ground mining, the portion of a vein in which there
is no ore.
dead hand, a hand that can not alienate, as of a person
civilly dead. "serfs held in dead hand." --morley. see
mortmain.
dead head naut., a rough block of wood used as an anchor
buoy.
dead heat, a heat or course between two or more race
horses, boats, etc., in which they come out exactly equal,
so that neither wins.
dead horse, an expression applied to a debt for wages paid
in advance. law
dead language, a language which is no longer spoken or in
common use by a people, and is known only in writings, as
the hebrew, greek, and latin.
dead plate mach., a solid covering over a part of a fire
grate, to prevent the entrance of air through that part.
dead pledge, a mortgage. see mortgage.
dead point. mach. see dead center.
dead reckoning naut., the method of determining the place
of a ship from a record kept of the courses sailed as
given by compass, and the distance made on each course as
found by log, with allowance for leeway, etc., without the
aid of celestial observations.
dead rise, the transverse upward curvature of a vessel's
floor.
dead rising, an elliptical line drawn on the sheer plan to
determine the sweep of the floorheads throughout the
ship's length.
dead-sea apple. see under apple.
dead set. see under set.
dead shot.
a an unerring marksman.
b a shot certain to be made.
dead smooth, the finest cut made; -- said of files.
dead wall arch., a blank wall unbroken by windows or
other openings.
dead water naut., the eddy water closing in under a
ship's stern when sailing.
dead weight.
a a heavy or oppressive burden. --dryden.
b shipping a ship's lading, when it consists of heavy
goods; or, the heaviest part of a ship's cargo.
c railroad the weight of rolling stock, the live
weight being the load. --knight.
dead wind naut., a wind directly ahead, or opposed to the
ship's course.
to be dead, to die. obs.
1913 webster
i deme thee, thou must algate be dead. --chaucer.
syn: inanimate; deceased; extinct. see lifeless.
1913 webster
see also:
die death alive living spindle dead ahead
dead angle dead block dead calm dead center dead point
dead color dead coloring dead door dead flat dead freight
dead ground dead hand mortmain dead head dead heat
dead horse dead language dead plate dead pledge mortgage
dead reckoning dead rise dead rising dead-sea apple apple
dead set set dead shot dead smooth dead wall
dead water dead weight dead wind to be dead lifeless
- [3] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
dead \dead\, v. t.
to make dead; to deaden; to deprive of life, force, or vigor.
obs.
1913 webster
heaven's stern decree,
with many an ill, hath numbed and deaded me. --chapman.
1913 webster
- [4] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
dead \dead\, v. i.
to die; to lose life or force. obs.
1913 webster
so iron, as soon as it is out of the fire, deadeth
straightway. --bacon.
1913 webster dead beat
- [5] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
dead \dead\ de^d, adv.
to a degree resembling death; to the last degree; completely;
wholly. colloq.
1913 webster
i was tired of reading, and dead sleepy. --dickens.
1913 webster
dead drunk, so drunk as to be unconscious.
1913 webster
see also:
dead drunk
- [6] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
dead \dead\ de^d, n.
1. the most quiet or deathlike time; the period of
profoundest repose, inertness, or gloom; as, the dead of
winter.
1913 webster
when the drum beat at dead of night. --campbell.
1913 webster
2. one who is dead; -- commonly used collectively.
1913 webster
and abraham stood up from before his dead. --gen.
xxiii. 3.
1913 webster
- [7] : WordNet (r) 2.0
dead
adj 1: no longer having or seeming to have or expecting to have
life; "the nerve is dead"; "a dead pallor"; "he was
marked as a dead man by the assassin" ant: alivep
2: not showing characteristics of life especially the capacity
to sustain life; no longer exerting force or having energy
or heat; "mars is a dead planet"; "a dead battery"; "dead
soil"; "dead coals"; "the fire is dead" ant: live
3: very tired; "was all in at the end of the day"; "so beat i
could flop down and go to sleep anywhere"; "bushed after
all that exercise"; "i'm dead after that long trip" syn:
all inp, beatp, bushedp, deadp
4: unerringly accurate; "a dead shot"; "took dead aim"
5: physically inactive; "crater lake is in the crater of a dead
volcano of the cascade range"
6: total; "dead silence"; "utter seriousness" syn: deada,
uttera
7: not endowed with life; "the inorganic world is inanimate";
"inanimate objects"; "dead stones" syn: inanimate, nonliving
ant: animate
8: followed by `to' not showing human feeling or sensitivity;
unresponsive; "passersby were dead to our plea for help";
"numb to the cries for mercy" syn: deadp, numbp
9: devoid of physical sensation; numb; "his gums were dead from
the novocain"; "she felt no discomfort as the dentist
drilled her deadened tooth"; "a public desensitized by
continuous television coverage of atrocities" syn: deadened
10: lacking acoustic resonance; "dead sounds characteristic of
some compact discs"; "the dead wall surfaces of a
recording studio"
11: not yielding a return; "dead capital"; "idle funds" syn: idle
12: not circulating or flowing; "dead air"; "dead water";
"stagnant water" syn: deada, stagnant
13: out of use or operation because of a fault or breakdown; "a
dead telephone line"; "the motor is dead"
14: not surviving in active use; "latin is a dead language"
15: lacking resilience or bounce; "a dead tennis ball"
16: no longer in force or use; inactive; "a defunct or dead
law"; "a defunct organization" syn: defunct
17: no longer having force or relevance; "a dead issue"
18: sudden and complete; "came to a dead stop" syn: deada
19: drained of electric charge; discharged; "a dead battery";
"left the lights on and came back to find the battery
drained" syn: drained
20: lacking animation or excitement or activity; "the party
being dead we left early"; "it was a lifeless party until
she arrived" syn: lifeless
21: devoid of activity; "this is a dead town; nothing ever
happens here"
n 1: people who are no longer living; "they buried the dead"
ant: living
2: a time when coldness or some other quality associated with
death is intense; "the dead of winter"
adv 1: quickly and without warning; "he stopped suddenly" syn: abruptly,
suddenly, short
2: completely and without qualification; used informally as
intensifiers; "an absolutely magnificent painting"; "a
perfectly idiotic idea"; "you're perfectly right";
"utterly miserable"; "you can be dead sure of my
innocence"; "was dead tired"; "dead right" syn: absolutely,
perfectly, utterly
see also:
alivep live all inp beatp bushedp deadp
deada uttera inanimate nonliving animate
numbp deadened idle stagnant defunct
drained lifeless living abruptly suddenly
short absolutely perfectly utterly
- [8] : Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
607 moby thesaurus words for "dead":
sol, a outrance, abeyant, abrupt, abruptly, absolute, absolutely,
accurate, achromatic, achromic, ago, all bets off, all gone,
all in, all off, all out, all over, all up, all-out, anechoic,
anemic, anesthetized, annihilated, antiquated, antique, apathetic,
arid, ashen, ashes, ashy, asleep, asleep in jesus, at an end,
at rest, awful silence, barren, bated, beat, beat up, beaten,
beige, belowground, benumbed, bereft of life, beyond all bounds,
beyond compare, beyond comparison, beyond measure, blah, bland,
blank, blase, bleak, bled white, blind, blind-alley, bloodless,
bloody, blown over, body, bone-weary, bones, bored, boring,
breathless, buried, bushed, by, bygone, bypast, cadaver,
cadaverous, called home, callous, calm, canceled, carcass, carrion,
cataleptic, catatonic, categorical, categorically, cecal, certain,
characterless, chloranemic, choked, choked off, clay, closed, cold,
collapsing, colorless, comatose, commonplace, complete, completely,
concluded, constricted, contracted, cool, corpse, corpselike,
corpus delicti, crack, croaked, crowbait, damned, damped, dampened,
dated, dead ahead, dead and buried, dead and gone, dead asleep,
dead body, dead man, dead of night, dead person, dead-and-alive,
dead-end, dead-tired, deadbeat, deadened, deadly, deadly pale,
death-struck, deathful, deathlike, deathlike silence, deathly,
deathly pale, debilitated, deceased, decedent, decided, deep,
deep asleep, definitely, defunct, deleted, demised, departed,
departed this life, depths, destitute of life, dilute, diluted,
dim, dimmed, dingy, direct, directly, discolored, dismal, disused,
dog-tired, dog-weary, done, done for, done in, done up, done with,
doped, dopey, dormant, down the drain, downright, drab, draggy,
drained, drearisome, dreary, droopy, drugged, dry, dry bones,
dryasdust, due, due north, dull, dulled, dun, dust, dusty, earth,
effete, elapsed, elephantine, embalmed corpse, emotionless, empty,
ended, enervated, entire, entirely, essentially, etiolated, even,
exact, exactly, exanimate, exhausted, expired, expressly, expunged,
exsanguinated, exsanguine, exsanguineous, extinct, extinguished,
extreme, extremely, fade, faded, fagged out, faint, faithfully,
fallen, fallow, fast asleep, fatigued, fini, finished, flaked-out,
flat, flat out, flavorless, food for worms, forgotten, forthright,
foul, frigid, full, fundamentally, ghastly, golden silence, gone,
gone glimmering, gone out, gone to glory, gone west, gone-by, gray,
grey, groggy, gruelly, had it, haggard, half-conscious, hardened,
has-been, heavy, hebetudinous, ho-hum, hollow, hueless, hush,
hush of night, hypochromic, immeasurably, impassible, imperceptive,
impercipient, impervious, in a beeline, in abeyance,
in all respects, in every respect, in line with, in suspense,
in the extreme, inactive, inane, inanimate, inaudibility,
incalculably, indefinitely, indifferent, inert, inexcitable,
infertile, infinitely, inorganic, insensate, insensible,
insensitive, insentient, insipid, inured, ipsissimis verbis,
irrecoverable, jaded, jejune, just, kaput, kaputt, knocked out,
lackadaisical, lackluster, languid, languorous, lapsed, late,
late lamented, latent, launched into eternity, leaden, lethargic,
lifeless, listless, literally, literatim, livid, logy, lost,
low-spirited, lucid stillness, lukewarm, lull, lumpish, lurid,
lusterless, martyred, mat, mealy, middle, midst, mild,
milk-and-water, monotonous, moribund, mortal remains, most,
motionless, muddy, muffled, mum, mummification, mummy, muted,
narcotized, neutral, nirvanic, no more, noiselessness, numb,
numbed, obdurate, oblivious, obsolete, obtuse, ordinary,
organic remains, out, out cold, out of it, out of style,
out of use, out-and-out, outmoded, outright, outworn, over, pale,
pale as death, pale-faced, pallid, pappy, passe, passed,
passed away, passed on, passive, past, pasty, peace, pedestrian,
perfect, perfected, perfectly, perished, phlegmatic, played out,
plodding, plumb, point-blank, pointless, poky, ponderous, pooped,
pooped out, positively, precise, precisely, profound, prosaic,
prostrate, pulpy, purely, pushing up daisies, quiescence, quiet,
quietness, quietude, radically, ready to drop, released, relics,
reliquiae, remains, reposing, rest, resting easy, right, rigid,
rigidly, rigorously, run out, run-of-the-mill, sainted, sallow,
sapless, sated, savorless, sedentary, semiconscious, senseless,
set at rest, settled, shot, shut, sickly, silence, silentness,
skeleton, slack, sleeping, sleepy, slow, sluggish, slumbering,
smitten with death, smoldering, smothered, softened, solemn,
solemn silence, somber, somnolent, sordo, sound asleep,
soundlessness, spaced out, spent, spiceless, spiritless, square,
squarely, squeezed shut, stagnant, stagnating, stale, standing,
static, sterile, stiff, stifled, still, stillborn, stillness,
stodgy, stoned, stony, straight, straight across, straight ahead,
straightforward, straightforwards, straightly, strangulated,
strictly, strung out, stuffy, stultified, subdued, sudden,
suddenly, superficial, superseded, supine, sure, suspended,
tacitness, taciturnity, taken away, taken off, tallow-faced, tame,
tasteless, tedious, tenement of clay, terminated, the dead,
the deceased, the defunct, the departed, the great majority,
the loved one, the majority, thick-skinned, thick-witted, thin,
thorough, thoroughly, through, through and through, through with,
tired out, tired to death, tiresome, to the letter,
tomblike silence, toneless, torpid, total, totally, tranquillity,
tuckered out, two-dimensional, unanimated, unaroused, unbroken,
uncolored, unconcerned, unconditionally, unconscious,
undeviatingly, unemotional, unequivocally, unerring, unerringly,
unfeeling, unfelt, unflavored, unfruitful, uninterested,
uninteresting, unlively, unmitigated, unmoving, unopen, unopened,
unperceptive, unproductive, unqualified, unrelieved, unresponsive,
unsavory, unswervingly, unsympathetic, unveeringly, unvented,
unventilated, used up, utter, utterly, vanished, vapid, vegetable,
vegetative, verbally, verbatim, verbatim et litteratim, wan,
washed up, washed-out, washed-up, washy, watered, watered-down,
watery, waxen, weak, weary, weary unto death, whacked, whey-faced,
whisht, white, wiped out, wishy-washy, with a vengeance,
with the lord, with the saints, without life,
without vital functions, wooden, word by word, word for word,
world-weary, worn out, worn-out, wound up, zapped, zonked,
zonked out
- [9] : Jargon File (4.3.1, 29 Jun 2001)
dead adj. 1. non-functional; down; crashed. especially used of
hardware. 2. at xerox parc, software that is working but not undergoing
continued development and support. 3. useless; inaccessible. antonym:
`live'. compare dead code.
see also:
down crash dead code
- [10] : The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (27 SEP 03)
dead
1. non-functional; down; crashed. especially used of
hardware.
2. at xerox parc, software that is working but not
undergoing continued development and support.
jargon file
see also:
down crash hardware xerox parc jargon file
- [11] : THE DEVIL'S DICTIONARY ((C)1911 Released April 15 1993)
dead, adj.
done with the work of breathing; done
with all the world; the mad race run
though to the end; the golden goal
attained and found to be a hole
squatol johnes
Results 1 - 10 of 36 found about dead: Dead
>> D Words
Dead, definition of term: Dead
dead_pag1.html Dead Reckoning
>> D Words
Dead Reckoning, definition of term: Dead Reckoning
dead+reckoning_pag1.html Dead Load
>> D Words
Dead Load, definition of term: Dead Load
dead+load_pag1.html Dead Ringer
>> D Words
Dead Ringer, definition of term: Dead Ringer
dead+ringer_pag1.html Dead Sea
>> D Words
Dead Sea, definition of term: Dead Sea
dead+sea_pag1.html Dead Weight
>> D Words
Dead Weight, definition of term: Dead Weight
dead+weight_pag1.html Dead Wall
>> D Words
Dead Wall, definition of term: Dead Wall
dead+wall_pag1.html Dead Shot
>> D Words
Dead Shot, definition of term: Dead Shot
dead+shot_pag1.html Dead Letter
>> D Words
Dead Letter, definition of term: Dead Letter
dead+letter_pag1.html Dead Language
>> D Words
Dead Language, definition of term: Dead Language
dead+language_pag1.html
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