defunct

Etymology
Borrowed from, past participle of.

Pronunciation

 * also
 * also

Adjective

 * 1)  Deceased, dead.
 * 2) No longer in use or active, nor expected to be again.
 * 3)  No longer in business or service, nor expected to be again.
 * 4)  Specifically, of a process: having terminated but not having been reaped (by its parent or an inheritor), and thus still occupying a process slot. See also zombie, zombie process.
 * 5)  (of a language) No longer spoken.
 * 1)  No longer in business or service, nor expected to be again.
 * 2)  Specifically, of a process: having terminated but not having been reaped (by its parent or an inheritor), and thus still occupying a process slot. See also zombie, zombie process.
 * 3)  (of a language) No longer spoken.

Synonyms

 * ,, ; see also Thesaurus:obsolete

Translations

 * Bulgarian: покоен
 * Catalan:
 * Dutch: ,
 * French:
 * Galician:
 * German: ,
 * Italian:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: avdöd
 * Turkish:, , vefat eden, vefat etmiş


 * Dutch: buiten gebruik, buiten werking
 * German:, ,  ,
 * Hungarian:
 * Maori: tūnguru
 * Norwegian: lagt ned, nedlagt,
 * Portuguese:
 * Turkish: feshedilmiş,, ,

Verb

 * 1) To make defunct.

Noun

 * 1) The dead person (referred to).
 * 2) * 1817 September, in Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine, volume 1, page 617:
 * he saw Robert Johnston, pannel, come out of the cott-house with the fork in his hand, and pass by Alexander Fall and the deponent; heard the pannell say, he had sticked the dog, and he would stick the whelps too; whereupon the pannell run after the defunct’s son with the fork in his hand,
 * he saw Robert Johnston, pannel, come out of the cott-house with the fork in his hand, and pass by Alexander Fall and the deponent; heard the pannell say, he had sticked the dog, and he would stick the whelps too; whereupon the pannell run after the defunct’s son with the fork in his hand,

Translations

 * Bulgarian:

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1) deceased