Is died an english word

умерший

прилагательное

- волочильный

существительное

- мн. dice игральная кость
- мн. dice шанс, удача; (pl dice) редк. риск
- мн. dice кубик
- мн. dies штамп, пуансон, клише
- штемпель, мундштук (пресса)

глагол

- умирать, пропадать
- = die away, = die down, = die out постепенно ослабевать, затихать (о ветре, звуке); глохнуть (о колебаниях); пропадать; замирать; останавливаться
- разг. умирать, очень хотеть; жаждать; сгорать от нетерпения
- замирать (о сердце)
- выдавливать, прессовать, чеканить, штамповать

Мои примеры

Словосочетания

a memorial plaque on the bridge for a diver who died in the line of duty — мемориальная доска на мосту в честь водолаза, погибшего при исполнении служебного долга  
a service in commemoration of those who died in the war — церковная служба в память о погибших на войне  
the year that he died — год его смерти  
he died at the hand of a murderer — он погиб от руки убийцы  
he died from blood-poisoning — он умер от заражения крови  
he all but died of his wound — он едва не умер от своей раны  
storm died down and a great calm succeeded — буря утихла, и наступило затишье  
candle died out — свеча догорела  
all the cattle have died off — вся скотина передохла  
died off plankton — мёртвый планктон  
he died many years since — он умер много лет назад  
plants died for lack of water — растения погибли из-за недостатка воды  

Примеры с переводом

He died of cancer.

Он умер от рака.

He died a poor man.

Он умер в бедности.

Their anger died.

Их гнев утих.

He died c 1850.

Он умер ок. 1850 г.

He died by poison.

Он скончался от яда.

The wind died down.

Ветер стих.

Some died aborning.

Некоторые умерли при рождении.

ещё 23 примера свернуть

Примеры, ожидающие перевода

The motor sputtered and died.

He died without a penny to his name.

Ten men died when the ship went down.

Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке , напротив примера.

Translation examples

  • умер

Died in hospital.

Умер в больнице.

He died in hospital.

В больнице он умер.

He died crucified.

Он умер на кресте.

Chávez has not died.

Чавес не умер.

He later died.

Позднее он умер.

He died soon afterwards.

Вскоре он умер.

One of the parents died — Father

Умер отец

One bloc had died.

Один блок умер.

G.R. died in prison.

Г.Р. умер в тюрьме.

But the key word here is «died

Но ключевое слово здесь «умер

He died about a year after they brought him in.” “He died?”

Года не прошло, как он умер. — Умер?!

And I think he died afterwards.

Кажется, он потом умер.

«When did you say he died

– Когда, вы сказали, он умер?

Pew was that sort, and he died a beggar-man.

Такой был Пью – и умер в нищете.

Flint was, and he died of rum at Savannah.

И Флинт был такой – и умер от рома в Саванне.

None of them has died yet.

Никто, однако, до сих пор не умер.

He is dead, and died well; may he sleep in peace!

Он умер смертью храбрых, мир его праху!

“Have you…” he began. “I mean, who… has anyone you known ever died?”

— А ты… — начал он. — В смысле, кто… у тебя тоже кто-то умер?

die 1

 (dī)

intr.v. died, dy·ing (dī′ĭng), dies

1. To stop living; become dead; expire: plants that died in the first frost of the season.

2. To cease existing, often gradually; fade: The sunlight died in the west.

3. To experience an intense, seemingly unbearable reaction to something: nearly died of embarrassment.

4. Informal To want something very much. Usually used in the progressive aspect: I am dying for a box of chocolates. She was dying to see the exhibit.

5. To stop working or operating: The motor died when we ran out of gas.

6. To become indifferent: had died to all worldly concerns.

Phrasal Verbs:

die back Botany

To be affected by dieback.

die down

To lose strength; subside: The winds died down.

die off

To undergo a sudden, sharp decline in population: hypothesized that pesticides were causing bees to die off across the country.

die out

To cease living or existing completely; become extinct: a theory that explains how the dinosaurs died out; customs that died out with the advent of technology.

Idioms:

die hard

1. To take a long time in passing out of existence: racial prejudices that die hard.

2. To resist against overwhelming, hopeless odds: radicalism that dies hard.

die on the vine

To fail, as from lack of support, especially at an early stage: a plan that died on the vine.

to die for Informal

Remarkable or highly desirable.



die 2

(dī)

n.

1. pl. dice (dīs)

a. A small cube marked on each side with from one to six dots, usually used in pairs in gambling and in various other games.

b. dice (used with a sing. verb) A game of chance using dice.

2. pl. dies A device used for cutting out, forming, or stamping material, especially:

a. An engraved metal piece used for impressing a design onto a softer metal, as in coining money.

b. One of several component pieces that are fitted into a diestock to cut threads on screws or bolts.

c. A part on a machine that punches shaped holes in, cuts, or forms sheet metal, cardboard, or other stock.

d. A metal block containing small conical holes through which plastic, metal, or other ductile material is extruded or drawn.

3. pl. dies Architecture The dado of a pedestal, especially when cube-shaped.

tr.v. died, die·ing, dies

To cut, form, or stamp with or as if with a die.

Idioms:

load the dice

1. To make an outcome highly probable; predetermine a result: «These factors merely load the dice, upping the odds that a household will fall into a certain … income distribution» (Thomas G. Exter).

2. To put another at a distinct disadvantage, as through prior maneuver: The dice were loaded against the defendant before the trial.

no dice

1. Of no use; futile.

2. Used as a refusal to a request.

the die is cast

The decision has been made and is irrevocable.


[Middle English

de

, gaming die, from Old French, possibly from Latin

datum

, given (as by fortune in the roll of the dice), neuter of

datus

, past participle of

dare

, to give; see

dō-

in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.]

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

die

(daɪ)

vb (mainly intr) , dies, dying or died

1. (Biology) (of an organism or its cells, organs, etc) to cease all biological activity permanently: she died of pneumonia.

2. (of something inanimate) to cease to exist; come to an end: the memory of her will never die.

3. (often foll by: away, down, or out) to lose strength, power, or energy, esp by degrees

4. (often foll by: away or down) to become calm or quiet; subside: the noise slowly died down.

5. (General Engineering) to stop functioning: the engine died.

6. to languish or pine, as with love, longing, etc

7. (usually foll by of) informal to be nearly overcome (with laughter, boredom, etc)

8. (Theology) theol to lack spiritual life within the soul, thus separating it from God and leading to eternal punishment

9. (tr) to undergo or suffer (a death of a specified kind) (esp in phrases such as die a saintly death)

10. (foll by to) to become indifferent or apathetic (to): to die to the world.

11. never say die informal never give up

12. die hard to cease to exist after resistance or a struggle: old habits die hard.

13. die in harness to die while still working or active, prior to retirement

14. be dying (foll by: for or an infinitive) to be eager or desperate (for something or to do something): I’m dying to see the new house.

15. to die for informal highly desirable: a salary to die for.

[Old English dīegan, probably of Scandinavian origin; compare Old Norse deyja, Old High German touwen]

Usage: It was formerly considered incorrect to use the preposition from after die, but of and from are now both acceptable: he died of/from his injuries


die

(daɪ)

n

1. (Tools)

a. a shaped block of metal or other hard material used to cut or form metal in a drop forge, press, or similar device

b. a tool of metal, silicon carbide, or other hard material with a conical hole through which wires, rods, or tubes are drawn to reduce their diameter

2. (Tools) an internally-threaded tool for cutting external threads. Compare tap26

3. (Metallurgy) a casting mould giving accurate dimensions and a good surface to the object cast. See also die-cast

4. (Architecture) architect the dado of a pedestal, usually cubic

5. (Games, other than specified) another name for dice2

6. (Gambling, except Cards) another name for dice2

7. as straight as a die perfectly honest

8. the die is cast the decision that commits a person irrevocably to an action has been taken

[C13 dee, from Old French de, perhaps from Vulgar Latin datum (unattested) a piece in games, noun use of past participle of Latin dare to play]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

die1

(daɪ)
v.i. died, dy•ing.

1. to cease to live; undergo the complete and permanent cessation of vital functions; become dead.

2. to cease to exist; vanish: The happy look died on her face.

3. to lose force, strength, or active qualities.

4. to cease to function; stop: The engine died.

5. to pass gradually; fade or subside gradually (usu. fol. by away, out, or down).

6. to faint or languish.

7. to suffer as if fatally: I’m dying of boredom!

8. to pine with desire, love, longing, etc.

9. to desire keenly: I’m dying for a cup of coffee.

10. Theol. to lose spiritual life.

11. to be no longer subject; become indifferent: to die to worldly matters.

12. die away, (of a sound) to become fainter and then cease altogether.

13. die down, to become calm or quiet; subside.

14. die off, to die one after another until the number is greatly reduced.

15. die out,

a. to cease to exist; become extinct.

b. to die away; fade; subside.

Idioms:

1. die hard, to give way or cease to exist only slowly or after a bitter struggle: Childhood beliefs die hard.

2. die on the vine, (of an idea, plan, or the like) to be rejected or ignored before having a chance to be developed.

3. to die for, stunning, remarkable: That dress is to die for.

[1150–1200; Middle English dien, deien < Old Norse deyja; akin to dead, death]

syn: die, perish mean to relinquish life. To die is to cease to live from any cause or circumstance; it is used figuratively of anything that has once displayed activity: He died of cancer. Her anger died. perish, a more literary term, implies death under harsh circumstances such as hunger or violence; figuratively, it connotes permanent disappearance: Hardship caused many pioneers to perish. Ancient Egyptian civilization has perished.

die2

(daɪ)

n., pl. dies for 1,2,4; dice for 3; n.

1.

a. any of various devices for cutting or forming material in a press or a stamping or forging machine.

b. a hollow device of steel for cutting the threads of bolts or the like.

c. a steel block or plate with small conical holes through which wire, plastic rods, etc., are drawn.

2. an engraved stamp for impressing a design upon some softer material.

v.t.

5. to impress, shape, or cut with a die.

Idioms:

the die is cast, the irrevocable decision has been made.

[1300–50; Middle English de < Old French de(i)]

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

die

When a person, animal, or plant dies, they stop living. When a person, animal, or plant is dying, they are so ill or injured that they will not live much longer. The other forms of die are dies, dying, died.

Blake died in January, aged 76.

The elm trees are all dying.

When someone dies as a result of a disease or injury, you can say that they die of the disease or injury or die from it.

An old woman dying of cancer was taken into hospital.

Simon Martin died from brain injuries caused by blows to the head.

Don’t use any preposition except of or from after die in sentences like these.

You say that someone dies of hunger or thirst, or dies of natural causes. Don’t use ‘die from’.

Millions of children are dying of hunger.


die

dye

These words are both pronounced (/daɪ/).

1. ‘die’

Die is a verb. When a person, animal, or plant dies, they stop living. The other forms of ‘die’ are dies, dying, died.

2. ‘dye’

Dye is both a noun and a verb. If you dye something such as hair or cloth, you change its colour by soaking it in a coloured liquid. This liquid is called a dye. The other forms of the verb ‘dye’ are dyes, dyeing, dyed.

She mixed finely pounded indigo leaves to dye her cloth deep blue.

Dip them in a yellow dye.

Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012

die

Past participle: died
Gerund: dying

Imperative
die
die
Present
I die
you die
he/she/it dies
we die
you die
they die
Preterite
I died
you died
he/she/it died
we died
you died
they died
Present Continuous
I am dying
you are dying
he/she/it is dying
we are dying
you are dying
they are dying
Present Perfect
I have died
you have died
he/she/it has died
we have died
you have died
they have died
Past Continuous
I was dying
you were dying
he/she/it was dying
we were dying
you were dying
they were dying
Past Perfect
I had died
you had died
he/she/it had died
we had died
you had died
they had died
Future
I will die
you will die
he/she/it will die
we will die
you will die
they will die
Future Perfect
I will have died
you will have died
he/she/it will have died
we will have died
you will have died
they will have died
Future Continuous
I will be dying
you will be dying
he/she/it will be dying
we will be dying
you will be dying
they will be dying
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been dying
you have been dying
he/she/it has been dying
we have been dying
you have been dying
they have been dying
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been dying
you will have been dying
he/she/it will have been dying
we will have been dying
you will have been dying
they will have been dying
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been dying
you had been dying
he/she/it had been dying
we had been dying
you had been dying
they had been dying
Conditional
I would die
you would die
he/she/it would die
we would die
you would die
they would die
Past Conditional
I would have died
you would have died
he/she/it would have died
we would have died
you would have died
they would have died

Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun 1. die - a small cube with 1 to 6 spots on the six facesdie — a small cube with 1 to 6 spots on the six faces; used in gambling to generate random numbers

dice

square block, cube — a block in the (approximate) shape of a cube

five, five-spot — a playing card or a domino or a die whose upward face shows five pips

four-spot, four — a playing card or domino or die whose upward face shows four pips

one-spot — a domino or die whose upward face shows one pip

six-spot, six — a playing card or domino or die whose upward face shows six pips

2. die — a device used for shaping metal

shaping tool — a tool for shaping metal

stamp — a block or die used to imprint a mark or design

3. die — a cutting tool that is fitted into a diestock and used for cutting male (external) screw threads on screws or bolts or pipes or rods

cutlery, cutting tool, cutter — a cutting implement; a tool for cutting

Verb 1. die - pass from physical life and lose all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain lifedie — pass from physical life and lose all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life; «She died from cancer»; «The children perished in the fire»; «The patient went peacefully»; «The old guy kicked the bucket at the age of 102»

croak, decease, drop dead, buy the farm, cash in one’s chips, give-up the ghost, kick the bucket, pass away, perish, snuff it, pop off, expire, conk, exit, choke, go, pass

abort — cease development, die, and be aborted; «an aborting fetus»

change state, turn — undergo a transformation or a change of position or action; «We turned from Socialism to Capitalism»; «The people turned against the President when he stole the election»

asphyxiate, stifle, suffocate — be asphyxiated; die from lack of oxygen; «The child suffocated under the pillow»

buy it, pip out — be killed or die;

drown — die from being submerged in water, getting water into the lungs, and asphyxiating; «The child drowned in the lake»

predecease — die before; die earlier than; «She predeceased her husband»

conk out, go bad, break down, die, fail, give out, give way, break, go — stop operating or functioning; «The engine finally went»; «The car died on the road»; «The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town»; «The coffee maker broke»; «The engine failed on the way to town»; «her eyesight went after the accident»

starve, famish — die of food deprivation; «The political prisoners starved to death»; «Many famished in the countryside during the drought»

die — suffer or face the pain of death; «Martyrs may die every day for their faith»

fall — die, as in battle or in a hunt; «Many soldiers fell at Verdun»; «Several deer have fallen to the same gun»; «The shooting victim fell dead»

succumb, yield — be fatally overwhelmed

die down — become progressively weaker; «the laughter died down»

die back, die down — suffer from a disease that kills shoots; «The plants near the garage are dying back»

die off, die out — become extinct; «Dinosaurs died out»

be born — come into existence through birth; «She was born on a farm»

2. die — suffer or face the pain of death; «Martyrs may die every day for their faith»

croak, decease, die, drop dead, buy the farm, cash in one’s chips, give-up the ghost, kick the bucket, pass away, perish, snuff it, pop off, expire, conk, exit, choke, go, pass — pass from physical life and lose all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life; «She died from cancer»; «The children perished in the fire»; «The patient went peacefully»; «The old guy kicked the bucket at the age of 102»

suffer, endure — undergo or be subjected to; «He suffered the penalty»; «Many saints suffered martyrdom»

3. die — be brought to or as if to the point of death by an intense emotion such as embarrassment, amusement, or shame; «I was dying with embarrassment when my little lie was discovered»; «We almost died laughing during the show»

lose it, break down, snap — lose control of one’s emotions; «When she heard that she had not passed the exam, she lost it completely»; «When her baby died, she snapped»

4. die — stop operating or functioning; «The engine finally went»; «The car died on the road»; «The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town»; «The coffee maker broke»; «The engine failed on the way to town»; «her eyesight went after the accident»

conk out, go bad, break down, fail, give out, give way, break, go

change — undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one’s or its original nature; «She changed completely as she grew older»; «The weather changed last night»

break — render inoperable or ineffective; «You broke the alarm clock when you took it apart!»

croak, decease, die, drop dead, buy the farm, cash in one’s chips, give-up the ghost, kick the bucket, pass away, perish, snuff it, pop off, expire, conk, exit, choke, go, pass — pass from physical life and lose all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life; «She died from cancer»; «The children perished in the fire»; «The patient went peacefully»; «The old guy kicked the bucket at the age of 102»

go down, crash — stop operating; «My computer crashed last night»; «The system goes down at least once a week»

blow out, burn out, blow — melt, break, or become otherwise unusable; «The lightbulbs blew out»; «The fuse blew»

misfire — fail to fire or detonate; «The guns misfired»

malfunction, misfunction — fail to function or function improperly; «the coffee maker malfunctioned»

5. die — feel indifferent towards; «She died to worldly things and eventually entered a monastery»

feel, experience — undergo an emotional sensation or be in a particular state of mind; «She felt resentful»; «He felt regret»

6. die — languish as with love or desire; «She dying for a cigarette»; «I was dying to leave»

pine, yen, yearn, ache, languish — have a desire for something or someone who is not present; «She ached for a cigarette»; «I am pining for my lover»

7. die — cut or shape with a die; «Die out leather for belts»

die out

cut out — form and create by cutting out; «Picasso cut out a guitar from a piece of paper»

8. die — to be on base at the end of an inning, of a player

baseball, baseball game — a ball game played with a bat and ball between two teams of nine players; teams take turns at bat trying to score runs; «he played baseball in high school»; «there was a baseball game on every empty lot»; «there was a desire for National League ball in the area»; «play ball!»

play — participate in games or sport; «We played hockey all afternoon»; «play cards»; «Pele played for the Brazilian teams in many important matches»

9. die - lose sparkle or bouquetdie — lose sparkle or bouquet; «wine and beer can pall»

become flat, pall

change — undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one’s or its original nature; «She changed completely as she grew older»; «The weather changed last night»

10. die — disappear or come to an end; «Their anger died»; «My secret will die with me!»

disappear, vanish, go away — get lost, as without warning or explanation; «He disappeared without a trace»

11. die — suffer spiritual death; be damned (in the religious sense); «Whosoever..believes in me shall never die»

faith, religion, religious belief — a strong belief in a supernatural power or powers that control human destiny; «he lost his faith but not his morality»

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

die

verb

1. pass away, depart, expire, perish, buy it (U.S. slang), check out (U.S. slang), kick it (slang), croak (slang), give up the ghost, go belly-up (slang), snuff it (slang), peg out (informal), kick the bucket (slang), buy the farm (U.S. slang), peg it (informal), decease, cark it (Austral. & N.Z. slang), pop your clogs (informal), breathe your last, hop the twig (slang) His mother died when he was a child.
pass away live, exist, survive, be born, come to life

2. stop, fail, halt, break down, run down, stop working, peter out, fizzle out, lose power, seize up, conk out (informal), go kaput (informal), go phut, fade out or away The engine coughed, spluttered, and died.

3. dwindle, end, decline, pass, disappear, sink, fade, weaken, diminish, vanish, decrease, decay, lapse, wither, wilt, lessen, wane, subside, ebb, die down, die out, abate, peter out, die away, grow less My love for you will never die.
dwindle increase, grow, flourish

be dying for something long for, want, desire, crave, yearn for, hunger for, pine for, hanker after, be eager for, ache for, swoon over, languish for, set your heart on I’m dying for a cigarette.

be dying of something (Informal) be overcome with, succumb to, be overwhelmed by, collapse with I’m dying of thirst.

die out

2. go out The fire has died out.

Quotations
«Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once» [William Shakespeare Julius Caesar]
«Only we die in earnest, that’s no jest» [Walter Raleigh On the Life of Man]
«Die, my dear doctor? That’s the last thing I shall do!» [Lord Palmerston]
«It’s not that I’m afraid to die. I just don’t want to be there when it happens» [Woody Allen Death]
«To die will be an awfully big adventure» [J.M. Barrie Peter Pan]
«Dying is a very dull, dreary affair. And my advice to you is to have nothing whatever to do with it» [Somerset Maugham]
«We shall die alone» [Blaise Pascal Pensées]
«A man dies still if he has done nothing, as one who has done much» [Homer Iliad]
«It is as natural to die as to be born; and to a little infant, perhaps, the one is as painful as the other» [Francis Bacon Of Death]

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

die

verb

2. To cease to exist.Away or out:

3. To become or cause to become less active or intense.Away, down, off, or out:

abate, bate, ease (off or up), ebb, fall, fall off, lapse, let up, moderate, remit, slacken, slack off, subside, wane.

4. To become inaudible.Away, out, or down:

The American Heritage® Roget’s Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

قالِب لِسَك المَعادِنيخْتَفي، يَذوب، يَضْمَحِليُريد بِرَغْبَةٍ شَديدَهيَموتيـَمُوتُ

morir

zemříthasnoutkostkamatricemizet

forsvindegå udlænges efteromkomme

morti

hinge heitmakärvamakõngemakoolemalahkuma

kuollaleimasinmuottinoppasokkeli

umrijetikockaumirati

halkockameghal

datomorir

matimeninggal

deyjadrepastdvína; deyja útfalla fráfara yfrum

死ぬ

죽다

moritalustessera

beigtiesizzustļoti gribētmatricemirt

murizar

kockamatricaodumrieťumrieť

umretikockapojematiumirati

kockaumretiкоцкаумрети

tärning

kufa

ตาย

кістка

chết

die

1 [daɪ] (dying (pres part)) VI

die back VI + ADV (Bot) → secarse


die

2 [daɪ] N

1. (dice (pl)) [daɪs]dado m
the die is castla suerte está echada

Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

die

[ˈdaɪ]

n

[dice] [ˈdaɪs] (pl) → m
the die is cast → les dés sont jetés

[dies] (pl) (ENGINEERING) (= tool) → coin m, étampe f (= mould) → matrice f

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

die1

(dai) present participle dying (ˈdaiiŋ) : past tense, past participle died verb

1. to lose life; to stop living and become dead. Those flowers are dying; She died of old age.

2. to fade; to disappear. The daylight was dying fast.

3. to have a strong desire (for something or to do something). I’m dying for a drink; I’m dying to see her.

diehard noun

a person who resists new ideas.

die away

to fade from sight or hearing. The sound died away into the distance.

die down

to lose strength or power. I think the wind has died down a bit.

die hard

to take a long time to disappear. Old habits die hard.

die off

to die quickly or in large numbers. Herds of cattle were dying off because of the drought.

die out

to cease to exist anywhere. The custom died out during the last century.


die2

(dai) noun

a stamp or punch for making raised designs on money, paper etc.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

die

يـَمُوتُ zemřít sterben πεθαίνω morir kuolla mourir umrijeti morire 死ぬ 죽다 sterven umrzeć morrer умирать ตาย ölmek chết 死亡

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

die

n. molde, troquel;

v. morir, fallecer, dejar de existir; morirse.

English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

die

vi (pret & pp died; ger dying) morir, fallecer

English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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From the verb die: (⇒ conjugate)
died is: Click the infinitive to see all available inflections
v past
v past p

WordReference English-Russian Dictionary © 2023:

Главные переводы
английский русский
die⇒ vi (cease to live) умирать несов
    умереть сов
  He died of starvation on March 4, 1782.
  Он умер от истощения 4 марта 1782 года.
die vi (stop working) (разг.) накрыться сов
   (разг.) отдать концы сов + м мн
  I think the toaster has died.
  По-моему, тостер накрылся.
  По-моему, тостер отдал концы.

Collins Russian Dictionary 2nd Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2000, 1997:

die [daɪ]
n
(
pl dice)
(in game) игра́льная кость*f
(pl dies)
(TECH) ма́трица, штамп
vi (person, emotion) умира́ть (умере́ть*perf)
(smile, light) угаса́ть (уга́снуть*perf)

to die of or from умира́ть (умере́ть*perf) от +gen

to be dying умира́ть (impf)

to be dying for sth/to do до́ смерти хоте́ть*(impf) чего́-н/+infin

die away vi (sound) замира́ть (замере́ть*perf)
(light) угаса́ть (уга́снуть*perf)

die down vi (wind, noise) утиха́ть (ути́хнуть*perf)
(fire) потуха́ть (поту́хнуть*perf)
(excitement) уле́чься*(perf)

die out vi (custom) умира́ть (умере́ть*perf)
(species) вымира́ть (вы́мереть*perf)

* is used to mark translations which have irregular inflections. The Russian-English side of the dictionary gives inflectional information.

died‘ также найдено в этих статьях:

Русский:

» to have died » What type of tense is in the sentence?
He died and went to heaven
…17th March is the day he died.: correct reading — English Only forum
…of which four have died,… — English Only forum
‘He died’ OR ‘He died of’ — English Only forum
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3,700 people died of starvation on one day in December — English Only forum
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a girl was rumoured to have died — English Only forum
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A person who died had been a serious contender — English Only forum
A reporter said soon after it that 20 people <have died><had died><died> — English Only forum
a reporter said that 20 people <have died><had died><died> — English Only forum
A student sent by the dean, who was an idiot, died. — English Only forum
according to February 2016 reports, worker died and three are missing — English Only forum
According to media reports in March 2017, seven workers have died / died — English Only forum
After Bud’s mother died, he has been… — English Only forum
After her husband died, she continuously works / worked [tense] — English Only forum
after her mother dies/died — English Only forum
After they died we wouldn’t get/didn’t get any more pets. — English Only forum
after they were/had been born, they died — English Only forum
All on board had died or all on board were dead — English Only forum
all the people having died — English Only forum
Almost died first year I come to school and et them pecans — English Only forum
Among them to have died….. — English Only forum
As he died, he said a prayer. — English Only forum
as many have died now as died then [grammar with comparison] — English Only forum
As you <have heard>, 103 passengers <have died> — English Only forum
back a horse that died in the gate — English Only forum
больше…

Посмотреть машинный перевод Google Translate по запросу died.

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Die, Died, or Dead?

Many students make mistakes with the words die and death. Here is a quick answer:

to die = a regular verb (die/died/died). Example: I don’t want to die. / My dog died. / We will die.

dead = an adjective. Example: Elvis Presley is dead. / I saw a dead mouse.

​

clouds in the sky for the dead

There is also a noun, death. It is mainly used in two ways.

1) an uncountable noun.  Definition: The end of life. Note: no article (a/an/the) is needed.

Example: I’m afraid of death. / He likes talking about life and death.

2) a countable noun.  Definition: A situation in which a person dies.

Example: There were many deaths in the war. / The death of John Lennon made many people sad.

Do You Think You Understand?

Choose the correct word for the below sentence.

1. This is a dangerous city. If you go outside at night, you might !

2. In 1000 years, I will .

3. Two years ago, my grandmother .

4. is very sad. I wish we lived forever.

5. The police found a body in the forest.

Answers: 

Important Note: Pass Away

We often use the phrasal verb pass away instead of the verb die. It is true that phrasal verbs are usually more casual than regular verbs. However, in this case, pass away is more polite and is better for formal situations.

For example, it is nicer to say, «I’m sorry to hear that your mother passed away» than «I’m sorry to hear that your mother died.» The second sentence is not rude, but the first one sounds nicer. The idea of ‘passing away’ means that the person has passed on, or moved on to a better place (heaven, for example). This is a nicer idea.

Write Your Own Sentences

What do you think about these questions? Write an answer in the comment area below.

  1. What would you like to do before you die?
  2. What customs does your country follow when someone dies?
  3. Where do we go when we die?
  4. Do you think people should think more about death?

— Matthew Barton / Englishcurrent.com

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