Talk:kill

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Latest comment: 1 year ago by Soap in topic intransitive use
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Wikipedia entry for "kill"[edit]

It has lots of etymological info on the word, so I'm depositing the relevant content here, so it can be disseminated and added to this Wiktionary entry:

Secondary meanings[edit]

  1. to destroy; do away with; extinguish: "His response killed our hopes."
  2. to destroy or neutralize the active qualities of: to kill an odor.
  3. to spoil the effect of: "His extra brushwork killed the painting."
  4. to cause (time) to be consumed with seeming rapidity or with a minimum of boredom, esp. by engaging in some easy activity or amusement of passing interest: "I had to kill three hours before plane time."
  5. to spend (time) unprofitably: "He killed ten good years on that job."
  6. Informal. to overcome completely or with irresistible effect: "That comedian kills me."
  7. to muffle or deaden: "This carpet kills the sound of footsteps."
  8. Informal. to cause distress or discomfort to: "These new shoes are killing me."
  9. Informal. to tire completely; exhaust: "The long hike killed us."
  10. Informal. to consume completely: "They killed a bottle of bourbon between them."
  11. to cancel publication of (a word, paragraph, item, etc.), esp. after it has been set in type.
  12. to defeat or veto (a legislative bill, etc.).
  13. Elect. to render (a circuit) dead.
  14. to stop the operation of (machinery, engines, etc.): "He killed the motor and the car stopped."
  15. Tennis. to hit (a ball) with such force that its return is impossible.
  16. Ice Hockey. to prevent the opposing team from scoring in the course of (a penalty being served by a teammate or teammates).
  17. to inflict or cause death.
  18. to commit murder.
  19. to be killed.
  20. to overcome completely; produce an irresistible effect: dressed to kill.
  21. Slang. to feel a smarting pain, as from a minor accident; sting: "I stubbed my little toe and that really kills."
  22. kill with kindness, to overdo in one's efforts to be kind: "The aunts would kill their nephews and nieces with kindness."
  23. kill off,
  • a. to destroy completely; kill, esp. successively or indiscriminately: The invaders killed off all the inhabitants of the town.
  • b. Informal. to extinguish; eliminate: The bus ride every day kills off all of my energy.

Nouns[edit]

  1. the act of killing, esp. game: The hounds moved in for the kill.
  2. an animal or animals killed.
  3. a number or quantity killed.
  4. an act or instance of hitting or destroying a target, esp. an enemy aircraft.
  5. the target so hit or destroyed.
  6. In sports "kill shot".

Synonyms[edit]

slaughter, massacre, butcher, croak, hang, electrocute, behead, guillotine, strangle, garrote, assassinate, frag.

kilt[edit]

we need the simple past kilt here, and at kilt Robert Ullmann 07:38, 21 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Changes[edit]

I removed a sense that I believe is not truly a distinct sense of the word but merely a figurative use of sense #1, i.e. "Dad is going to kill me," merely implying hyperbole that Dad is going to punish me severely, which I am dreading to the same extent--or which will be as painful--as if here were to actually cause me to die. I also removed "To force a company out of business" because I think that's just an extended use of other senses, i.e. to render something inoperative or to annihilate.--71.111.229.19 09:40, 8 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

Computing sense?[edit]

Might be a computing sense, but I don't know for sure. I vaguely remember the Visual Basic language from the 1990s having a Kill command that deleted files, and then there's the (deprecated template usage) kill file. Equinox 21:09, 6 June 2012 (UTC)Reply

RFV discussion: June–July 2021[edit]

This entry has survived Wiktionary's verification process (permalink).

Please do not re-nominate for verification without comprehensive reasons for doing so.


Rfv-sense: kiln TVdinnerless (talk) 15:51, 30 June 2021 (UTC)Reply

cited. For that matter, I have personally heard this word used with this meaning. Kiwima (talk) 00:50, 7 July 2021 (UTC)Reply

RFV-passed Kiwima (talk) 22:07, 14 July 2021 (UTC)Reply

intransitive use[edit]

it makes me realize that almost all canonically transitive verbs can be used intransitively, even if it's semantically transitive. e.g. in an Animorphs book, a hawk says "I killed", with emphasis because it was the character's first time as a hawk and therefore the first time that they had ever directly killed an animal for food. But there was no mention of what the animal was. I might want to reorganize this whole page since I think definitions 5 and 11 are the same except for transitivity, and that maybe we dont need to list them separately. Soap 16:27, 27 February 2023 (UTC)Reply