νεκρός

Etymology
This likely did not form at the Proto-Indo-European level, as the expected result due to suffix ablaut would be, which would regularly yield. It probably formed either at the Proto-Greek stage or the Ancient Greek stage from ) + . Either way, ultimately from.

See also 🇨🇬, (as opposed to ) and Sanskrit.

Adjective

 * 1) dead

Noun

 * 1) a dead body, corpse
 * 2) one who is dead (in plural: the dead)
 * 3) dying person

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1) dead no longer living
 * 2)  dead, lifeless lacking energy or life
 * 3)  dead completely inactive; broken, inoperable
 * 4)  dead no longer used or required
 * 1)  dead completely inactive; broken, inoperable
 * 2)  dead no longer used or required
 * 1)  dead no longer used or required
 * 1)  dead no longer used or required

Noun

 * 1) dead man, decedent