DECAY

DECAY

The personification of Decay was a metaphysical entity of short existence. It was a physical process that begun when death occured. It combined linear progress and even elements of life and was not a true concept. The entity itself was relative weak and compared to the others young and borrowed elements ot the Prime concepts. DECAY the entity was slain and destroyed during the WAR OF THE CONCEPTS (THE CONFLICT )

decay verb de·​cay | \di-ˈkā  \ Definition of decay intransitive verb

1 : to decline from a sound or prosperous condition a decaying empire 2 : to decrease usually gradually in size, quantity, activity, or force The three voices … decayed and died out upon her ear. — Thomas Hardy 3 : to fall into ruin the city's decaying neighborhoods 4 : to decline in health, strength, or vigor Her mind is beginning to decay with age. believes that the moral fiber of our society is decaying 5 : to undergo decomposition decaying fruit Her teeth were decaying. … most isotopes of copper decay quickly, but two are stable: Cu-63 and Cu-65. — David E. Thomas transitive verb

1 obsolete : to cause to decay : IMPAIR infirmity that decays the wise — William Shakespeare 2 : to destroy by decomposition wood decayed by bacteria decay noun Definition of decay (Entry 2 of 2) 1 : gradual decline in strength, soundness, or prosperity or in degree of excellence or perfection the decay of the public school system 2 : a wasting or wearing away : RUIN a neighborhood that had fallen into decay 3 obsolete : DESTRUCTION, DEATH … sullen presage of your own decay. — Shakespeare 4a : ROT The material is … resistant to fire, decay and termites … — Jack McClintock specifically : aerobic decomposition of proteins chiefly by bacteria b : the product of decay tooth decay 5 : a decline in health or vigor mental decay 6 : decrease in quantity, activity, or force: such as a chemistry : spontaneous decrease in the number of radioactive atoms in radioactive material b physics : spontaneous disintegration (as of an atom or a particle) Other Words from