deadlike

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English

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Etymology

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From dead +‎ -like.

Adjective

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deadlike (comparative more deadlike, superlative most deadlike)

  1. Synonym of deathlike
    • 1834, William Johnson Neale, Will Watch: From the Auto-biography of a British Officer, volume 1, page 129:
      [] —I hollooed, but ye didn’t hear me, for I saw him catch ye just at the back of the head, in the large o’ the neck—a ticklish sort of a place—and down ye went—lor, sir, for all the world like a pig o’ lead. I never thought to have heard ye speak in this world again, ye went down so deadlike! and now the worst is over, a hard time ye’ve had of it and no wonder!”
    • 2005 March 22, Nora Maiden, A Practical Guide to Christian Maturity & Love, Xlibris, →ISBN, page 206:
      4. Jungle/tropical forests vs cold, snowy areas. The cold, snowy areas represent people who are spiritually cold and almost deadlike.
    • 2010 December, Sharon Orsack, “Chapter One”, in Bobby & Me: A Novel, Tate Publishing & Enterprises, →ISBN, page 9:
      Jenny Lee reached out and took hold of the man’s hand. It was cold and clammy, a deadlike feeling.