A pestilence which ravaged Europe and Asia in the fourteenth century. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ OE. deth, deað, AS. deáð; akin to OS. dōð, D. dood, G. tod, Icel. dauði, Sw. & Dan. död, Goth. dauþus; from a verb meaning to die. See Die, v. i., and cf. Dead. ]
☞ Local death is going on at all times and in all parts of the living body, in which individual cells and elements are being cast off and replaced by new; a process essential to life. General death is of two kinds; death of the body as a whole (somatic or systemic death), and death of the tissues. By the former is implied the absolute cessation of the functions of the brain, the circulatory and the respiratory organs; by the latter the entire disappearance of the vital actions of the ultimate structural constituents of the body. When death takes place, the body as a whole dies first, the death of the tissues sometimes not occurring until after a considerable interval. Huxley. [ 1913 Webster ]
The death of a language can not be exactly compared with the death of a plant. J. Peile. [ 1913 Webster ]
A death that I abhor. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]
Let me die the death of the righteous. Num. xxiii. 10. [ 1913 Webster ]
Swiftly flies the feathered death. Dryden. [ 1913 Webster ]
He caught his death the last county sessions. Addison. [ 1913 Webster ]
Death! great proprietor of all. Young. [ 1913 Webster ]
And I looked, and behold a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was Death. Rev. vi. 8. [ 1913 Webster ]
Not to suffer a man of death to live. Bacon. [ 1913 Webster ]
To be carnally minded is death. Rom. viii. 6. [ 1913 Webster ]
It was death to them to think of entertaining such doctrines. Atterbury. [ 1913 Webster ]
And urged him, so that his soul was vexed unto death. Judg. xvi. 16. [ 1913 Webster ]
☞ Death is much used adjectively and as the first part of a compound, meaning, in general, of or pertaining to death, causing or presaging death; as, deathbed or death bed; deathblow or death blow, etc. [ 1913 Webster ]
Black death.
Civil death,
Death adder. (Zool.)
Death bell,
Death candle,
Death damp,
Death fire,
The death fires danced at night. Coleridge.
Death grapple,
Death in life,
Death rate,
Death rattle,
Death's door,
Death stroke,
Death throe,
Death token,
Death warrant.
Death wound.
Spiritual death (Scripture),
The gates of death,
The second death,
To be the death of,
n. The bed in which a person dies; hence, the closing hours of life of one who dies by sickness or the like; the last sickness. [ 1913 Webster ]
That often-quoted passage from Lord Hervey in which the Queen's deathbed is described. Thackeray. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. (Zool.) Tengmalm's or Richardson's owl (Nyctale Tengmalmi); -- so called from a superstition of the North American Indians that its note presages death. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. A mortal or crushing blow; a stroke or event which kills or destroys. [ 1913 Webster ]
The deathblow of my hope. Byron. [ 1913 Webster ]
a.
These eyes behold
The deathful scene. Pope. [ 1913 Webster ]
The deathless gods and deathful earth. Chapman. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. Appearance of death. Jer. Taylor. [ 1913 Webster ]
n.
a. Not subject to death, destruction, or extinction; immortal; undying; imperishable;
a.
A deathlike slumber, and a dead repose. Pope. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. The quality of being deathly; deadliness. Southey. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Deadly; fatal; mortal; destructive. [ 1913 Webster ]
adv. Deadly;
n. a list of persons killed in a war or other disaster. [ WordNet 1.5 ]
n. A naked human skull as the emblem of death; the head of the conventional personification of death. [ 1913 Webster ]
I had rather be married to a death's-head with a bone in his mouth. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]
Death's-head moth (Zool.),
n. The deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna). Dr. Prior. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. An executioner; a headsman or hangman. [ Obs. ] Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]
adv. Toward death. [ 1913 Webster ]
n.
She is always seeing apparitions and hearing deathwatches. Addison. [ 1913 Webster ]
I did not hear the dog howl, mother, or the deathwatch beat. Tennyson. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t.
The ideated man . . . as he stood in the intellect of God. Sir T. Browne. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. The faculty or capacity of the mind for forming ideas; the exercise of this capacity; the act of the mind by which objects of sense are apprehended and retained as objects of thought. [ 1913 Webster ]
The whole mass of residua which have been accumulated . . . all enter now into the process of ideation. J. D. Morell. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Pertaining to, or characterized by, ideation. [ 1913 Webster ]
Certain sensational or ideational stimuli. Blackw. Mag. [ 1913 Webster ]
interj. [ Corrupted fr. God's death. ] An exclamation expressive of impatience or anger. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Said to be so called in allusion to an old alleged practice among mountebanks' boys of eating toads (popularly supposed to be poisonous), in order that their masters might have an opportunity of pretending to effect a cure. The French equivalent expression is un avaleur de couleuvres. Cf. Toady. ] A fawning, obsequious parasite; a mean sycophant; a flatterer; a toady. V. Knox. [ 1913 Webster ]
You had nearly imposed upon me, but you have lost your labor. You're too zealous a toadeater, and betray yourself. Dickens. [ 1913 Webster ]