💀

death

An user
I   hold   the   power   of   life   and   death
💀
  for   every
🔁
  person
🧑‍🦱
  I   take   with   me .

Κρατάω τη δύναμη της ζωής και του θανάτου για κάθε άτομο που παίρνω μαζί μου.

An user
Scipione   kept   this   office
🏢
  until   his   death
💀
.

Ο Scipione κράτησε αυτό το γραφείο μέχρι το θάνατό του.

An user
He
👨
  was   sentenced   to death
💀
  for   plotting   to   kill
🔪🩸👤
  Pope   Leo
  the   Tenth
10th
.

Καταδικάστηκε σε θάνατο για να σχεδιάσει για να σκοτώσει τον Πάπα Λέοντα τον δέκατο.

An user
In   the   months   before   his   death
💀
Hume an   alcoholic had   begun   drinking   again
🔁
.

Τους μήνες πριν από το θάνατό του, ο Hume, ένας αλκοολικός, είχε αρχίσει να πίνει ξανά.

An user
Savonarola  visited   Lorenzo   on
🔛
  his   death bed .

Ο Savonarola επισκέφθηκε τον Lorenzo στο κρεβάτι του θανάτου.

An user
President   Bush   said   that   he
👨
  and   his   wife
👰‍♀️
  Laura   were   saddened   by  Norwood's  death
💀
.

Ο Πρόεδρος Μπους είπε ότι αυτός και η σύζυγός του Laura λυπήθηκαν από το θάνατο του Norwood.

(Αγγλικός)

  1. (countable, uncountable) The cessation of life and all associated processes; the end of an organism's existence as an entity independent from its environment and its return to an inert, nonliving state.
  2. (countable, uncountable) The cessation of life and all associated processes; the end of an organism's existence as an entity independent from its environment and its return to an inert, nonliving state.
  3. (capitalized, countable, often, uncountable) The personification of death as a (usually male) hooded figure with a scythe; the Grim Reaper.
  4. (countable, uncountable) The collapse or end of something.
  5. (countable, especially, figuratively, uncountable) The collapse or end of something.
  6. (countable, figuratively, uncountable) Spiritual lifelessness.

Συχνότητα

A1
Προφέρεται ως (IPA)
/dɛθ/
Ετυμολογία (Αγγλικός)

In summary

From Middle English deeth, from Old English dēaþ, from Proto-West Germanic *dauþu, from Proto-Germanic *dauþuz (compare West Frisian dead, Dutch dood, German Tod, Swedish död, Norwegian død), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰówtus. More at die.

Related words

θάνατος

πεθαίνω

θανατάς

χάρος

πεθαμός

μοιραίο

Θάνατος

αποθαμός

thánatos

τελευταίος

Χάρος

θανατοσ

θανατικός

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