dead
1. people who are no longer living (Freq. 9) - they buried the dead • Ant: living • Hypernyms: people • Hyponyms: slain • Member Meronyms: dead person, dead soul, deceased person, deceased, decedent, departed 2. a time when coldness (or some other quality associated with death) is intense (Freq. 1) - the dead of winter • Hypernyms: time
1. no longer having or seeming to have or expecting to have life (Freq. 72) - the nerve is dead - a dead pallor - he was marked as a dead man by the assassin • Ant: alive • Similar to: asleep, at peace, at rest, deceased, departed, gone, assassinated, bloodless, exsanguine, exsanguinous, brain dead, breathless, inanimate, pulseless, cold, d.o.a., deathlike, deathly, defunct, doomed, executed, fallen, late, late, exanimate, murdered, nonviable, slain, stillborn, stone-dead • Derivationally related forms: deadness • Attrubites: animation, life, living, aliveness, vitality 2. not showing characteristics of life especially the capacity to sustain life; no longer exerting force or having energy or heat (Freq. 4) - Mars is a dead planet - dead soil - dead coals - the fire is dead • Ant: live • Similar to: extinct, out, lifeless, out of play • See Also: extinct • Derivationally related forms: deadness 3. very tired (Freq. 2) - 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 in, beat, bushed • Similar to: tired • Usage Domain: colloquialism 4. unerringly accurate (Freq. 1) - a dead shot - took dead aim • Similar to: precise 5. physically inactive (Freq. 1) - Crater Lake is in the crater of a dead volcano of the Cascade Range • Similar to: extinct • Derivationally related forms: deadness 6. (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: numb • Similar to: insensitive • Derivationally related forms: numbness (for: numb), deadness 7. 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 • Similar to: insensitive • Derivationally related forms: deadness 8. lacking acoustic resonance - dead sounds characteristic of some compact discs - the dead wall surfaces of a recording studio • Similar to: unreverberant, nonresonant 9. not yielding a return - dead capital - idle funds • Syn: idle • Similar to: unprofitable 10. not circulating or flowing - dead air - dead water - stagnant water • Syn: stagnant • Similar to: standing • Derivationally related forms: stagnancy (for: stagnant), stagnate (for: stagnant), deadness 11. not surviving in active use - Latin is a dead language • Similar to: extinct, nonextant • Derivationally related forms: deadness 12. lacking resilience or bounce - a dead tennis ball • Similar to: inelastic • Derivationally related forms: deadness 13. out of use or operation because of a fault or breakdown - a dead telephone line - the motor is dead • Similar to: inoperative • Derivationally related forms: deadness 14. no longer having force or relevance - a dead issue • Similar to: noncurrent 15. complete - came to a dead stop - utter seriousness • Syn: utter • Similar to: complete 16. drained of electric charge; discharged - a dead battery - left the lights on and came back to find the battery drained • Syn: drained • Similar to: uncharged • Derivationally related forms: deadness 17. devoid of activity - this is a dead town; nothing ever happens here • Similar to: inactive
1. quickly and without warning - he stopped suddenly • Syn: abruptly, suddenly, short • Derived from adjective: sudden (for: suddenly), abrupt (for: abruptly) 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 • Derived from adjective: utter (for: utterly), perfect (for: perfectly), absolute (for: absolutely)
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