die away, (of a sound) to become weaker or fainter and then cease: The hoofbeats gradually died away.
13.
die down, to become calm or quiet; subside.
14.
die off, to die one after another until the number is greatly reduced: Her friends are dying off.
15.
die out,
a.
to cease to exist; become extinct: Both lines of the family died out before the turn of the century.
b.
to die away; fade; subside: The roar of the engines died out as the rocket vanished into the clouds.
Idioms
16.
die hard,
a.
to die only after a bitter struggle.
b.
to give way or surrender slowly or with difficulty: Childhood beliefs die hard.
17.
die standing up, Theater. (of a performance) to be received with silence rather than applause.
18.
never say die, never give up hope; never abandon one's efforts.
19.
to die for, stunning; remarkable: That dress is to die for.
Origin: 1150–1200; Middle English dien, deien < Old Norse deyja.Compare dead, death
Synonyms 1. expire, depart. Die,pass away (pass on), perish mean to relinquish life. To die is to become dead from any cause and in any circumstances. It is the simplest, plainest, and most direct word for this idea, and is used figuratively of anything that has once displayed activity: An echo, flame, storm, rumor dies. Pass away (or pass on) is a commonly used euphemism implying a con-tinuation of life after death: Grandfather passed away (passed on). Perish, a more literary term, implies death under harsh circumstances such as hunger, cold, neglect, etc.; figuratively, perish connotes utter extinction: Hardship caused many pioneers to perish. Ancient Egyptian civilization has perished.
die
2/daɪ/Show Spelled[dahy]Show IPAnoun, plural dies for 1, 2, 4,dice for 3;verb, died, die·ing.
noun
1.
Machinery.
a.
any of various devices for cutting or forming material in a press or a stamping or forging machine.
b.
a hollow device of steel, often composed of several pieces to be fitted into a stock, for cutting the threads of bolts or the like.
c.
one of the separate pieces of such a device.
d.
a steel block or plate with small conical holes through which wire, plastic rods, etc., are drawn.
2.
an engraved stamp for impressing a design upon some softer material, as in coining money.
the die is cast, the irrevocable decision has been made; fate has taken charge: The die is cast—I can't turn back.
Origin: 1300–50; Middle English de (in early Modern English taking the vowel of the plural form dice) < Old French de(i), presumbly < Latin datum given (neuter past participle of dare to give), perhaps in the derivative sense “put, placed,” hence “played, cast”
early 14c. (as a plural), from O.Fr. de, of uncertain origin, perhaps from L. datum "given," pp. of dare (see date (1)), which, in addition to "give," had a secondary sense of "to play" (as a chess piece); or else from "what is given" (by chance or Fortune). Sense of "stamping
in. to “perish” (figuratively) from laughter or some other emotionally intense response. : The whole audience died laughing.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition. Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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