Nouns (13)
dead
n. people who are no longer living; "they buried the dead"
tally, reckoning
n. a bill for an amount due
reckoning, calculation, computation, figuring
n. problem solving that involves numbers or quantities
tally, count, counting, numeration, enumeration, reckoning
n. the act of counting; "the counting continued for several hours"
Verbs (0)
Adverbs (13)
short, dead, abruptly, suddenly
adv. quickly and without warning; "he stopped suddenly"
plumb, dead, altogether, perfectly, completely, entirely, totally, utterly, absolutely
adv. 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"
Adjectives (32)
dead
adj. not showing characteristics of life especially the capacity to sustain life; no longer exerting force or having energy or heat; "Mars is a dead planet"; "a dead battery"; "dead soil"; "dead coals"; "the fire is dead"
dead, utter
adj. "dead silence"; "utter seriousness"
dead, extinguished
adj. physically inactive; "Crater Lake is in the crater of a dead volcano of the Cascade Range"
dead, inanimate
adj. no longer having or seeming to have or expecting to have life; "the nerve is dead"; "a dead pallor"; "he was marked as a dead man by the assassin"
dead, lifeless
adj. lacking animation or excitement or activity; "the party being dead we left early"; "it was a lifeless party until she arrived"
dead, nonresilient
adj. lacking resilience or bounce; "a dead tennis ball"
dead, wiped out
adj. not surviving in active use; "Latin is a dead language"
dead, unerring
adj. unerringly accurate; "a dead shot"; "took dead aim"
down, dead, out of service, crashed
adj. being put out by a strikeout; "two down in the bottom of the ninth"
standing, still, dead, stagnant
adj. not in physical motion; "the inertia of an object at rest"
dead, anechoic, sound-absorbent
adj. (unreverberant)
beat, dead, knocked out, bushed, dead tired, all in
adj. very tired; "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"
Fuzzynyms (83)
victim
n. an unfortunate person who suffers from some adverse circumstance
fatality, human death
n. a death resulting from an accident or a disaster; "a decrease in the number of automobile fatalities"
statement, financial statement
n. a document showing credits and debits
judgment, judgement, judging
n. the cognitive process of reaching a decision or drawing conclusions
addition, summation
n. the arithmetic operation of summing; calculating the sum of two or more numbers; "the summation of four and three gives seven"; "four plus three equals seven"
inactive, dormant
adj. of e.g. volcanos; not erupting and not extinct ; "a dormant volcano"
cold, deceased, departed, asleep, gone, at peace, at rest
adj. dead; "he is deceased"; "our dear departed friend"
dropped
adj. (used of a mammal) born
slain
adj. killed; `slain' is formal or literary as in "slain warriors"; "a picture of St. George and the slain dragon"
corrupt, crooked
adj. not straight; dishonest or immoral or evasive
adulterate, debased, adulterated
adj. mixed with impurities
immoral
adj. deliberately violating accepted principles of right and wrong
ungodly, sinful, iniquitous, peccant
adj. characterized by iniquity; wicked because it is believed to be a sin; "iniquitous deeds"; "he said it was sinful to wear lipstick"; "ungodly acts"
corrupt, tainted, putrid, decomposed, rotten
adj. touched by rot or decay; "tainted bacon"; "`corrupt' is archaic"
rotting, carious, decayed, decaying
adj. (of teeth) affected with cavities or decay
quick, quickly, promptly
adv. with little or no delay; "the rescue squad arrived promptly"; "come here, quick!"
clean, good, sound, through, thoroughly, soundly
adv. "He was soundly defeated"; "We beat him good"; "She is sound asleep"; "I'm soaked through"
altogether, all, completely, wholly
adv. to a complete degree or to the full or entire extent (`whole' is often used informally for `wholly'); "he was wholly convinced"; "entirely satisfied with the meal"; "it was completely different from what we expected"; "was completely at fault"; "a totally new situation"; "the directions were all wrong"; "it was not altogether her fault"; "an altogether new approach"; "a whole new idea"
sure, for sure, surely, certainly, for certain
adv. definitely or positively (`sure' is sometimes used informally for `surely'); "the results are surely encouraging"; "she certainly is a hard worker"; "it's going to be a good day for sure"; "they are coming, for certain"; "they thought he had been killed sure enough"; "he'll win sure as shooting"; "they sure smell good"; "sure he'll come"
indubitably
adv. in a manner or to a degree that could not be doubted; "it was immediately and indubitably apparent that I had interrupted a scene of lovers"
undoubtedly, doubtless, beyond any doubt, beyond question, without doubt
adv. "It's undoubtedly very beautiful"
positively
adv. extremely; "it was positively monumental"
undeniably
adv. to an undeniable degree or in an undeniable manner; "she is undeniably the most gifted student in the class"
decidedly, unquestionably, emphatically, definitely
adv. "It was decidedly too expensive"
assuredly
adv. without a doubt; "the grammar schools were assuredly not intended for the gentry alone"
decisively
adv. with finality; conclusively; "the voted settled the argument decisively"
just, exactly, precisely
adv. indicating exactness or preciseness; "he was doing precisely (or exactly) what she had told him to do"; "it was just as he said--the jewel was gone"; "it has just enough salt"
strictly, stringently
adv. in a stringent manner; "the laws are stringently enforced"; "stringently controlled"
unquestionably, unimpeachably
adv. without question; "Fred Winter is unquestionably the jockey to follow"; "they hired unimpeachably first-rate faculty members"
completely
adv. "He had filled out the form completely"
right, fully, all the way
adv. to the greatest degree or extent; completely or entirely; (`full' in this sense is used as a combining form); "fully grown"; "he didn't fully understand"; "knew full well"; "full-grown"; "full-fledged"
Synonyms (91)
implicit, unquestioning
adj. being without doubt or reserve; "implicit trust"
independent
adj. not dependent on or conditioned by or relative to anything else
infinite
adj. total and all-embracing; "God's infinite wisdom"
pure, unmixed, undiluted
adj. (of color) being chromatically pure; not diluted with white or grey or black
syntactically independent
adj. (grammar) standing apart from a normal syntactical relation with other sentence elements: e.g. "joking apart" in "joking apart, we'd better go now"
total, unqualified
adj. not limited or restricted; "an unqualified denial"
asphyxiating
adj. tending to deprive of oxygen; "asphyxiating gasses"
choking, stifling, smothering, suffocating
adj. causing difficulty in breathing especially through lack of fresh air and presence of heat; "the choking June dust"; "the smothering soft voices"; "smothering heat"; "the room was suffocating--hot and airless"
panting, gasping, out-of-breath, pursy, short-winded, winded
adj. breathing laboriously or convulsively
limp, flaccid
adj. lacking in strength or firmness or resilience; "flaccid muscles"; "took his lax hand in hers"; "gave a limp handshake"; "a limp gesture as if waving away all desire to know" G.K.Chesterton; "a slack grip"
inflexible
adj. incapable of being bent or deformed
springless
adj. lacking in elasticity or vitality; "went off with springless steps"
unresponsive
adj. (economics) slow to react to changing conditions: "an inelastic price structure"; "inelastic demand for a commodity"
accurate
adj. conforming exactly or almost exactly to fact or to a standard or performing with total accuracy; "an accurate reproduction"; "the accounting was accurate"; "accurate measurements"; "an accurate scale"
fine, subtle
adj. minutely precise especially in differences in meaning; "a fine distinction"
hairsplitting, finespun
adj. developed in excessively fine detail; "finespun distinctions"
nice, meticulous, punctilious
adj. marked by precise accordance with details; "meticulous research"; "punctilious in his attention to rules of etiquette"
pinpoint
adj. meticulously precise; "pinpoint accuracy"
very
adj. precisely as stated; "the very center of town"
bad, defective
adj. not working properly; "a bad telephone connection"; "a defective appliance"
still, static, inactive, at rest, motionless
adj. not in physical motion; "the inertia of an object at rest"
becalmed
adj. rendered motionless for lack of wind
frozen, rooted, stock-still
adj. absolutely still; "frozen with horror"; "they stood rooted in astonishment"
immobile, unmoving
adj. (nonmoving)
inert
adj. unable to move or resist motion
sitting
adj. not moving and therefore easy to attack; "a sitting target"
slack
adj. flowing with little speed as e.g. at the turning of the tide; "slack water"
stationary
adj. standing still; "the car remained stationary with the engine running"
nonresonant
adj. not reverberant; lacking a tendency to reverberate
weary, aweary
adj. physically and mentally fatigued; "`aweary' is archaic"
blear, bleary, bleary-eyed, blear-eyed
adj. tired to the point of exhaustion
blown, out of breath
adj. (tired)
bored, world-weary
adj. tired of the world; "bored with life"; "strolled through the museum with a bored air"
wasted, haggard, drawn, careworn, worn
adj. showing the wearing effects of overwork or care or suffering; "looking careworn as she bent over her mending"; "her face was drawn and haggard from sleeplessness"; "that raddled but still noble face"; "shocked to see the worn look of his handsome young face"- Charles Dickens
drooping, flagging
adj. weak from exhaustion
washed-out, burned-out, burnt-out, burned out, burnt out, exhausted, spent, worn-out, fagged, fatigued, played-out, played out, washed out, worn out
adj. drained of energy or effectiveness; extremely tired; completely exhausted; "the day's shopping left her exhausted"; "he went to bed dog-tired"; "was fagged and sweaty"; "the trembling of his played out limbs"; "felt completely washed-out"; "only worn-out horses and cattle"; "you look worn out"
footsore
adj. having sore or tired feet
jaded, wearied
adj. exhausted; "my father's words had left me jaded and depressed"- William Styron
travel-worn
adj. tired by travel
unrefreshed, unrested
adj. not rested or refreshed;
Antonyms (8)
living
n. people who are still living; "save your pity for the living"
live
adj. exerting force or containing energy; "live coals"; "tossed a live cigarette out the window"; "got a shock from a live wire"; "live ore is unmined ore"; "a live bomb"; "a live ball is one in play"
hot
adj. connected to a power source: "a live wire"; "a hot wire"
animate, alive
adj. having life or vigor or spirit; "an animated and expressive face"; "animated conversation"; "became very animated when he heard the good news"
vital
adj. full of spirit; "a dynamic full of life woman"; "a vital and charismatic leader"; "this whole lively world"
progressive, reformist
adj. favoring or promoting reform (often by government action)
dead reckoning
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