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5.09
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kill verb [ kɪl ]

• cause the death of (a person, animal, or other living thing).
• "her father was killed in a car crash"
Similar: murder, cause the death of, take/end the life of, do away with, make away with, assassinate, do to death, eliminate, terminate, dispatch, finish off, put to death, execute, slaughter, butcher, massacre, wipe out, destroy, annihilate, erase, eradicate, exterminate, extirpate, decimate, mow down, shoot down, cut down, cut to pieces, put down, put to sleep, bump off, polish off, do in, do for, knock off, top, take out, croak, stiff, blow away, liquidate, dispose of, ice, off, rub out, waste, whack, scrag, smoke, slay,
• put an end to or cause the failure or defeat of (something).
• "two fast goals from Dublin killed any hopes of a famous Sligo victory"
Similar: destroy, put an end to, bring to an end, be the end of, end, extinguish, dash, quell, quash, ruin, wreck, shatter, smash, crush, scotch, stop, block, frustrate, thwart, put a stop to, prevent, defeat, derail, put paid to, do for, put the lid on, put the kibosh on, stymie, queer, scupper, dish, veto, vote down, rule against, reject, throw out, overrule, overturn, disallow, give the thumbs down to, squash,
Opposite: facilitate, pass, accept,
• overwhelm (someone) with an emotion.
• "the suspense is killing me"
Similar: overwhelm, take someone's breath away, leave speechless, shake, move, stir, stun, amaze, astonish, stagger, dumbfound, bowl over, blow away, knock sideways, blow someone's mind, knock for six, flabbergast,
• pass (time, or a specified amount of it), typically while waiting for a particular event.
• "when he reached the station he found he actually had an hour to kill"
Similar: while away, use up, fill up, fill in, fill, occupy, beguile, pass, spend, expend, fritter away, waste,

kill noun

• an act of killing, especially of one animal by another.
• "a lion has made a kill"
Similar: death blow, killing, act of killing, dispatch, conclusion, ending, finish, end, climax, coup de grâce,
Origin: Middle English (in the sense ‘strike, beat’, also ‘put to death’): probably of Germanic origin and related to quell. The noun originally denoted a stroke or blow.

kill noun

• (in place names, especially in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania) a stream, creek, or tributary.
• "Kill Van Kull"
Origin: mid 17th century: from Dutch kil, from Middle Dutch kille ‘riverbed, channel’.

be in at the kill

• be present at or benefit from the successful conclusion of an enterprise.

go for the kill

• take ruthless or decisive action to turn a situation to one's advantage.

if it kills one

• whatever the problems or difficulties involved.
"we are going to smile and be pleasant if it kills us"

kill oneself laughing

• be overcome with laughter.

kill or cure

• (of a remedy for a problem) likely to either work well or fail catastrophically, with no possibility of partial success.
"the spring Budget will be kill or cure"

kill two birds with one stone

• achieve two aims at once.

kill someone with kindness

• spoil someone by overindulging them.



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