meaning of decay

1. To pass gradually from a sound, prosperous, or perfect state, to one of imperfection, adversity, or dissolution; to waste away; to decline; to fail; to become weak, corrupt, or disintegrated; to rot; to perish; as, a tree decays; fortunes decay; hopes decay.
2.
To cause to decay; to impair.
3.
To destroy.
4.
Gradual failure of health, strength, soundness, prosperity, or of any species of excellence or perfection; tendency toward dissolution or extinction; corruption; rottenness; decline; deterioration; as, the decay of the body; the decay of virtue; the decay of the Roman empire; a castle in decay.
5.
Destruction; death.
6.
Cause of decay.
7.
decay [Nuclear physics] An automatic conversion which is applied to most array-valued expressions in C; they "decay into" pointer-valued expressions pointing to the arrays first element. This term is not used in the official standard for the language. [Jargon File] DECdesign A software analysis and design tool from DEC supporting several methodologies. Now replaced by Teamwork.
8.
the organic phenomenon of rotting


Related Words

decay | decayable | decayed | decayer | decaying |

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