Dead
61dead — 1. Without life. SEE ALSO: death. 2. Numb. * * * Dying Experience at Dartmouth * * * dead ded adj 1) deprived of life: having died <dead of scarlet fever> 2) lacking power to move, feel, or respond: NUMB dead n …
62Dead — 1. very tired; exhausted; 2. quiet: Business is dead today ; 3. used to add emphasis to a statement; completely: dead right ; a dead shot ; dead stupid ; 4. sexually dull: a dead root ; 5. (horseracing, etc.) (of a racetrack) not conducive to… …
63déad — adj 1 dead; torpid, dull; still, standing (of water); 1. physical, (1) of an animal or vegetable; (2) of flesh, dead, without sensation; (3) of blood, (a) congealed, (b) blood away from the body, gore; déad blód congealed blood; 2. fig. dead to,… …
64dead — [OE] Dead is part of a Germanic family of adjectives (including also German tot, Dutch dood, Swedish död, and Gothic dauths) which come from a prehistoric Germanic adjective *dauthaz. This in turn came from an earlier *dhautós, which was the past …
65dead — ded n. time when there is no life; dead person or persons adj. not living; lacking perception; inactive; feeble, subdued; absolute, definite; (Slang) very tired; exhausted; quiet (as in business is dead today ) adv. totally; suddenly; certainly;… …
66dead to — recklessly ignoring A Victorian survival, which used to refer mainly to sexual behaviour, when a person might be dead to honour or propriety: I cannot suppose that he is altogether Dead to Propriety, though how long such Restraint will… …
67dead — Make, make loa, moelepo. See kukui, death. ♦ Dead body, kino make, kino kupapa u. ♦ War dead, mākaua. ♦ To pretend to be dead, ho omake …
68dead — See inner dead center lower dead center outer dead center …
69dead — [OE] Dead is part of a Germanic family of adjectives (including also German tot, Dutch dood, Swedish död, and Gothic dauths) which come from a prehistoric Germanic adjective *dauthaz. This in turn came from an earlier *dhautós, which was the past …
70dead — See: CATCH DEAD, DROP DEAD, STONEDEAD …