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Created page with 'File:lighterstill.jpgright|frame *I. 1. The act or fact of dying; the end of life; the final cessation of the vital functions of a...'
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*I. 1. The act or fact of dying; the end of life; the final cessation of the vital [[functions]] of an [[animal]] or [[plant]]. a. of an [[individual]].

::b. in the abstract.

::c. as a personified agent. (Usually figured as a skeleton; see also DEATH'S-HEAD.)

:2. The [[state]] of [[being]] dead; the state or condition of being without life, animation, or activity. death-in-life, life that lacks any satisfaction or [[purpose]]; living death. (Cf. quot. 1841 s.v. DEATHLINESS.) ¶In preceding senses the death was frequent in Old and Middle English, and down to the 16th c. See also 7, 12c, 13; to die the death: see DIE.

:3. transf. The loss or cessation of life in a particular part or tissue of a living being.

:4. Loss of sensation or vitality, state of unconsciousness, swoon. Obs. rare. (Cf. DEAD a. 2.)

:5. fig. a. The loss or want of [[spiritual]] life; the being or becoming spiritually dead. the second death: the punishment or destruction of lost [[soul]]s after physical death.

::b. Loss or deprivation of civil life; the [[fact]] or state of being cut off from [[society]], or from certain rights and privileges, as by banishment, imprisonment for life, etc. (Usually civil death.)

::c. Of a thing: Cessation of being, end, extinction, destruction.

:6. Bloodshed, slaughter, murder.

:7. Cause or occasion of death, as in to be the death of; something that kills, or renders liable to death; often hyperbolically; poet. a deadly weapon, poison, etc.

[[Category: General Reference]]

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