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All decease synonyms

de·cease
D d

noun decease

  • death — Death is the permanent end of the life of a person or animal.
  • curtains — death or ruin; the end
  • dying — ceasing to live; approaching death; expiring: a dying man.
  • dissolution — the act or process of resolving or dissolving into parts or elements.
  • departure — Departure or a departure is the act of going away from somewhere.
  • quietus — a finishing stroke; anything that effectually ends or settles: Having given a quietus to the argument, she left.
  • sleep — to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.
  • demise — The demise of something or someone is their end or death.
  • release — to lease again.
  • passing — going by or past; elapsing: He was feeling better with each passing day.
  • silence — absence of any sound or noise; stillness.
  • taps — a cylindrical stick, long plug, or stopper for closing an opening through which liquid is drawn, as in a cask; spigot.
  • grim reaper — the personification of death as a man or cloaked skeleton holding a scythe.

verb decease

  • depart — When something or someone departs from a place, they leave it and start a journey to another place.
  • perish — to die or be destroyed through violence, privation, etc.: to perish in an earthquake.
  • die — When people, animals, and plants die, they stop living.
  • drop — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • cease — If something ceases, it stops happening or existing.
  • pass — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • succumb — to give way to superior force; yield: to succumb to despair.
  • croak — When a frog or bird croaks, it makes a harsh, low sound.
  • check out — When you check out of a hotel or clinic where you have been staying, or if someone checks you out, you pay the bill and leave.
  • pass away — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • pass over — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • cool off — If someone or something cools off, or if you cool them off, they become cooler after having been hot.
  • pass on — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
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