become ill, sicken, grow faint, ail to become worse, weaken, decay to debase, lower (oneself, etc.), become wretched Note: Certain mutated forms of some...
overfeed oneself Deverbal from zapaść. zapaść f (pathology) collapse (sudden and often unannounced loss of postural tone) Synonym: kolaps decay, ruin, disrepair...
[…], published 1819, →OCLC, page 92: Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare The lone and level sands stretch...
become ill, sicken, grow faint, ail; to become worse, weaken, decay; to debase, lower (oneself, etc.), become wretched”) Note: Certain mutated forms of some...
(hay, grain etc.) to rot, decay (emitting heat, because of biologic action) Synonym: ҡыҙыу (qıźıw) (bodily damage) to burn oneself because of an exposure...
for William Ponsonby, →OCLC, page 226: But now when Philtra ſaw my lands decay, And former liuelod fayle, ſhe left me quight […]. 1692–1717, Robert South...
some contend for 1667, attributed to Richard Allestree, The Causes of the Decay of Christian Piety. […], London: […] R. Norton for T. Garthwait, […], →OCLC:...
korír yeresacʻ imocʻ ― get you gone, be gone! (intransitive) to perish, to decay, to be destroyed կորնչել սովամահ ― kornčʻel sovamah ― to die of starvation...
1609, William Shakespeare, Sonnet 15: […] wasteful Time debateth with Decay, To change your day of youth to sullied night (obsolete, transitive) To...
• (pāt) m (Urdu spelling پات) flying, mode of flying, flight throwing oneself into or down, falling, fall, downfall Declension of पात (masc cons-stem)...