unalive
English
Etymology
From un- + alive. Internet usage originates from circumventing systems that censor the words "kill" or "suicide".
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ən.əlaɪ̯v/
Adjective
unalive (comparative more unalive, superlative most unalive)
- Not alive; dead or inanimate.
- 1927, Olive Higgins Prouty, Conflict: A Novel, page 69:
- John Sheldon laid down Sheilah ' s hand beside her on the bed , as if it had been a book , or something unalive, and took out of his bag near by an accessory that was almost as much a part of him as his glasses.
- 1964, Eric Fromm, The Heart of Man, page 55:
- Often her anxiety will contribute toward making the child afraid of life and attracted to that which is unalive.
- 1988, Richard Rossner, The Whole Story, page 14:
- She was amazed that he wasn't changed , that he wasn't hurt , or perhaps utterly unalive , murdered .
- 2000, Charles Baxter, The Feast of Love, page 106:
- I wait for them to droop as in a natural cycle. But they are stubbornly unalive and therefore unwilting.
- 2012, J. Jeremy Wisnewski, Heidegger: An Introduction, page 104:
- We don't experience a corpse as just an object; we experience it as an object that was once alive, but which no longer is. We experience it as "unalive" (Bt, 282).
- Lacking vivacity and liveliness; dull or sterile.
- 1929, American Association of University Women, AAUW Journal - Volumes 23-25, page 106:
- Rebecca despises her professors because they cannot think as clearly as she can, cannot argue as well as she can, and are tired and dowdy and unalive.
- 1936, Clement Wood, The Glory Road: An Autobiography, page 78:
- The silent city asleep at our back , joyless and unalive.
- 1944, International Journal of Sex-Economy and Orgone Research, page 186:
- No, medicine is not an art , it is a science, but a mechanistic, unalive one.
- 1977, Psychotherapy & Social Science Review - Volume 11, page 4:
- No amount of psychoanalytic interpretation will have an effect if the therapeutic atmosphere is heavy , unalive, and boring .
- 1983, John S. McCann, The Critical Reputation of Tennessee Williams, page 171:
- SLS seems to me not so much moral or immoral as simply a caricature; not admirable or deplorable, but absurd . . . . I found ( SLS ) hollow , unproductive , unalive , and above all stagy: not cinematic.
- 2008, The Middle Way - Volumes 83-84, page 145:
- Our perception labels it as negative, just like our minds have been trained to accept only the clinical and unreal, the sterile and unalive, the prepackaged and filtered.
- Lacking energy and feeling; passionless; mechanical.
- 1953, Sydney J. Harris, Strictly Personal, page 213:
- Rather be unhappy , and know it , than unalive, and not know it .
- 1974, William R.Parker, Elaine St. Johus, Prayer Can Change Your Life, page 229:
- But now these symptoms which seemed to be bad and inimical , namely , this anxiety or guilt , prove themselves to be helpful and friendly, for they intrude themselves in order to bring healing by awakening this living yet unalive person.
- 1975, Clark E. Moustakas, The Touch of Loneliness, page 39:
- If I feel placid or unalive must I feign excitement?
- 1977, Michael D. Marcaccio, The Hapgoods Three Earnest Brothers, page 157:
- She made him look impetuous, excitable; he made her seem cold, unalive.
- 1978, Alvin R. Mahrer, Experiencing: A Humanistic Theory of Psychology and Psychiatry, page 268:
- Fromm ( 1968 ) refers to this as the spectre of a mechanized society in which human beings are slowly being transformed into the mechanical thing which is the society - passive, automatic, unfeeling, run by computers, unalive, a product of conditioning.
- Lacking a fulfilling life; meaningless.
- 1966, Lois G. Gordon, Dialectic of the Beast and Monk, page 287:
- In one rather poignant moment she reveals this predicament with her husband : if she has emasculated him throughout the years , Willie , in his own passive way , has made her feel similarly unalive: Was I ever lovable ?
- 2008, William Saroyan, William E. Justice, He Flies Through the Air with the Greatest of Ease, page 28:
- And for the past six months I have been separated from my writing, and I have been nothing, or I have been walking about unalive, some indistinct shadow in a nightmare of the universe.
- 2009, Carole Jones, Disappearing Men:, page 34:
- It is directly related, however, to being and non-being, a relation which suggests that being is defined by work if without a job one becomes "unalive".
- (often with "to") Lacking consciousness; unresponsive, indifferent or oblivious.
- 1930, Sir Mirza M. Ismail, Speeches - Volume 1, page 128:
- We are not unalive to the gravity of the problem of unemployment but we want co-operation here also, and we believe that , if we receive it , hundreds of young men who are now swelling the ranks of the unemployed , may achieve self-support in a happy, healthy and independent life.
- 1933, Thomas Earle Welby, Second Impressions, page 74:
- The realism was largely mere recoil , by a man unalive to how beer and a ribald joke can carry the common man through bibulation ; but the hunger of the mind was a very positive thing, active in him and in many of his most remarkable characters.
- 1950, Roy Chapman Andrews, My Favorite Stories of the Great Outdoors, page 314:
- Next day Tappan was not unalive to the changing character of the forest.
- 1977, Stuart Holroyd, Psi and the Consciousness Explosion, page 204:
- If ... the universe is unalive and indifferent , I will hope and work for something in myself quite different from what I will seek if the universe is laden with mind and life .
- 1981, Stanley Keleman, Your Body Speaks Its Mind, page 29:
- How unalive we are, how unincarnated we are, reveals itself as unresponsiveness, ungracefulness, and restricted bodily mobility.
Derived terms
Noun
unalive (plural unalives)
- One who is unalive.
- 1967, Helen Bevington, “Speaking of Books: Hellgazers and Rejoicers”, in The New York Times Book Review, volume 72, page 2:
- Most people are the unalives the notalives, the impersons, existing in an unworld of unlove and unbeing.
- 2009, Jirí Flajšar, Zénó Vernyik, Words into Pictures: E. E. Cummings’ Art Across Borders, page 83:
- The very latest of Mr. Cummings's new poems are fixed in rigid attitudes of youth, which now seem to show signs of weariness, caused by the strain of a prolonged defiance against "the sweet&aged people who rule this world," against the “unhearts,” the “unminds,” the “unalives."
Verb
unalive (third-person singular simple present unalives, present participle unaliving, simple past and past participle unalived) (chiefly Internet slang, euphemistic)
- (transitive, nonstandard or euphemistic) To make unalive; to kill.
- 2017, Nicolas Michaud, Jacob Thomas May, Deadpool and Philosophy: My Common Sense Is Tingling:
- He “unalives” bad guys, sometimes for free, and this gives him a sense of purpose, even in an absurd world.
- 2017, Margaret Newmeli, Another Dimension: The Ultimate Amalgam, page 160:
- Or does anyone know how to stop Broly without unaliving him?
- 2019, Aman K Singh, The Deserters: The Curse Bearer, page 237:
- "We are going to 'unalive' them once again,” said Yukt laughing and the men looked at him like he was crazy.
- 2021 May 18, Katie Storey, “Woman mortified after her old school teacher follows her on OnlyFans… and says she was always ‘something special’”, in The Sun:
- Sharing just how awkward she felt, Rara, who also has her own YouTube channel, joked she wanted to "unalive" herself.
- (intransitive, nonstandard or euphemistic) To die.
- 2020, F. H. Fischer, The Second Daughter's Darkness, page 90:
- Carl sighs, and ironically wishes to unalive out loud.
- (transitive, reflexive, nonstandard or euphemistic) To kill (oneself); to commit suicide.
- Jeffrey Epstein is thought to have unalived himself, but Tucker Carlson calls this position into question.
Translations
online euphemism for "die"
|
Anagrams
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.