perish

[ per-ish ]
/ ˈpɛr ɪʃ /

verb (used without object)

to die or be destroyed through violence, privation, etc.: to perish in an earthquake.
to pass away or disappear: an age of elegance that has forever perished.
to suffer destruction or ruin: His valuable paintings perished in the fire.
to suffer spiritual death: Save us, lest we perish.

Idioms for perish

    perish the thought, may it never happen: used facetiously or as an afterthought of foreboding.

Origin of perish

1200–50; Middle English perissen < Old French periss-, long stem of perir < Latin perīre to perish, literally, go through, spend fully, equivalent to per- per- + īre to go

synonym study for perish

1. See die1.

OTHER WORDS FROM perish

per·ish·less, adjective per·ish·ment, noun un·per·ished, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for perished

British Dictionary definitions for perished (1 of 2)

perished
/ (ˈpɛrɪʃt) /

adjective

informal (of a person, part of the body, etc) extremely cold

British Dictionary definitions for perished (2 of 2)

perish
/ (ˈpɛrɪʃ) /

verb (intr)

to be destroyed or die, esp in an untimely way
(tr sometimes followed by with or from) to cause to suffer we were perished with cold
to rot leather perishes if exposed to bad weather
perish the thought! may it never be or happen thus

noun

do a perish Australian informal to die or come near to dying of thirst or starvation

Word Origin for perish

C13: from Old French périr, from Latin perīre to pass away entirely, from per- (away) + īre to go

Idioms and Phrases with perished

perish