释义 |
death \ˈdeth\ noun (plural deaths \-ths sometimes -thz\) Etymology: Middle English deeth, deth, from Old English dēath; akin to Old High German tōd death, Old Norse dauthi, Gothic dauthus; derivative from the root of Old Norse deyja to die — more at die 1. : the ending of all vital functions without possibility of recovery either in animals or plants or any parts of them : the end of life : the act, process, or fact of dying 2. a. : the cause or occasion of loss of life < drinking was the death of him > : a deadly weapon or agency < a cobra with death in its fangs > b. archaic : plague — see black death 3. usually capitalized : the bringer of death personified and conventionally represented as a skeleton with a scythe : the destroyer of life : grim reaper 4. a. : the state of being no longer alive < in death as in life > b. : a joyless dull tasteless existence : the state of being without full possession or enjoyment of the intellectual or physical faculties < the death in life of long years spent in a hospital bed > c. : cessation or absence of spiritual life variously conceived as alienation from God, deadness to the appeals of spiritual ideals, annihilation of the spirit as a result of sin, or irredeemable damnation — called also spiritual death < to be carnally minded is death — Rom 8:6 (Authorized Version) > 5. : the passing or destruction of something inanimate < the death of the rackety old Third Avenue El — Newsweek > or intangible < the death of all his hopes > < the death of vaudeville > : the process of such passing < the death of the empire > : extinction < the death of a species > 6. : civil death 7. : lethal or murderous violence : homicide < merchants of death > < a man of death — Francis Bacon > 8. Christian Science : the lie of life in matter : that which is unreal and untrue : illusion • - at death's door - be death on - in at the death - to death - to the death |