v
(rare, obsolete) To be tedious to; to exhaust.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To become or make bad (all senses).
v
(intransitive, rare) To destroy life; cut off.
adj
(computing, slang, of an MP3 audio file) Corrupted by conversion through a text format, requiring uncooking to be properly listenable.
v
To waste, spoil, or consume; to make worthless.
adj
(business) Of imported goods: having suffered damage in the country of origin.
v
(intransitive, computing, of software) To undergo software rot, that is, to fail to be updated in a changing environment, so as to eventually become legacy or obsolete.
v
(intransitive) To rot, decay or putrefy.
n
(usually in the plural) A waste product.
adj
Tending or designed to depredate.
n
A stripping or plundering; spoliation.
adj
(Australia) Shortened form of devastated.
v
(intransitive, figuratively) To become spiritually dead; to lose hope.
v
(transitive, figuratively) To squander or waste.
v
(transitive) To debase by distorting the real nature of (something).
v
(intransitive, rare) To get into a state of disrepair.
n
A damaged portion of a tape or disk, causing a brief omission of audio, video, or data.
v
To enervate; to exhaust the vigour or elasticity of.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To wear out; wear away; exhaust; spend; waste.
v
To remain unused; not to fulfill its purpose.
n
An uninterrupted sequence of losses.
n
(uncountable) The destruction or ruin of an object.
v
(obsolete) To subdue the appetite by poor or scanty diet; to mortify.
v
(transitive) To euthanize a person as a consequence of their having reached old age.
adj
Alternative form of down for the count [(idiomatic) Decisively beaten; defeated; rendered irrelevant for the long term.]
n
(now rare) Obliteration, destruction.
n
(uncountable) Something that leads to serious trouble or destruction.
n
(architecture) The concept of designing a building so that, if it eventually collapses, it will leave behind aesthetically pleasing and long-lasting ruins.
n
The cause of being ruined, destroyed or lost.
n
(rare, academic) Obsession with ruins.
v
(sports) To lower the standing of.
n
A spoiling or ruining; destruction.
v
(transitive, archaic) To ravish; to debauch.
n
The act by which something is tarnished.
v
(rare, transitive) To not waste or reverse the wasting of (something).
adj
Dominated or plagued by war.
adj
(informal) Finished; having no future in a particular role; no longer capable, effective or needed.
v
(idiomatic) To lose energy and/or become weak and feeble.
n
Damage or depreciation resulting from ordinary use (normally as something excluded from a guarantee or warranty of quality, or as justifying a write-down in a set of accounts).
v
To cause (something) to become damaged, useless, or ineffective through continued use, especially hard, heavy, or careless use.
v
(UK, dialect, archaic, intransitive) To decay.
v
To disparage, belittle, or remove the satisfaction and joy from; to act as a wet blanket towards.
adj
Full of wrack or wreckage; ruinous; destructive.
v
(obsolete) Synonym of wrought
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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