Beat to death as a point
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
BELABORBeat to death, as a point
toed as a function word (1) to indicate the extent or degree (as of completeness or accuracy) loyal to a man generous to a fault or the extent and result (as of an action or a condition) beaten to death (2) to indicate the last or an intermediate point of a series moderate to cool temperatures
OVERUSEBeat to death, so to speak
BELABORBeat to death, so to speak
mortallyIn such a manner as to cause death
daggerscharacter å used as a reference mark or to indicate a death date
wingingShoot (a bird) in the wing, so as to prevent flight without causing death
FANTASIADisney movie that bored me to death as a kid because it had no words
inquestsA judicial inquiry to ascertain the facts relating to an incident, such as a death
numberto be thought of as the instrument of fate in the death of a person
viaticathe Eucharist or Communion as given to a person dying or in danger of death
runbring to a specified condition by or as if by running ran himself to death
stranglingSqueeze or constrict the neck of (a person or animal), esp. so as to cause death
crucifiedPut (someone) to death by nailing or binding them to a cross, esp. as an ancient punishment
crucifyingPut (someone) to death by nailing or binding them to a cross, esp. as an ancient punishment
crucifyPut (someone) to death by nailing or binding them to a cross, esp. as an ancient punishment
crucifiesPut (someone) to death by nailing or binding them to a cross, esp. as an ancient punishment
plankto be forced, as by pirates, to walk to one's death by stepping off a plank extending from the ship's side over the water
sympodiumThe apparent main axis or stem of a plant, made up of successive secondary axes due to the death of each season's terminal bud, as in the vine
sympodiaThe apparent main axis or stem of a plant, made up of successive secondary axes due to the death of each season's terminal bud, as in the vine
epicureanismAn ancient school of philosophy founded in Athens by Epicurus. The school rejected determinism and advocated hedonism (pleasure as the highest good), but of a restrained kind: mental pleasure was regarded more highly than physical, and the ultimate pleasure was held to be freedom from anxiety and mental pain, esp. that arising from needless fear of death and of the gods
wordwritten or printed character or combination of characters representing a spoken word the number of words to a line sometimes used with the first letter of a real or pretended taboo word prefixed as an often humorous euphemism the first man to utter the f word on British TV Time we were not afraid to use the d word and talk about death Erma Bombeck