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Deadly   /dˈɛdli/   Listen
adjective
deadly  adj.  
1.
Capable of causing death; mortal; fatal; destructive; certain or likely to cause death; as, a deadly blow or wound.
2.
Aiming or willing to destroy; implacable; desperately hostile; flagitious; as, deadly enemies. "Thy assailant is quick, skillful, and deadly."
3.
Subject to death; mortal. (Obs.) "The image of a deadly man."
Deadly nightshade (Bot.), a poisonous plant; belladonna. See under Nightshade.



adverb
deadly  adv.  
1.
In a manner resembling, or as if produced by, death; deathly. "Deadly pale."
2.
In a manner to occasion death; mortally. "The groanings of a deadly wounded man."
3.
In an implacable manner; destructively.
4.
Extremely. (Obs.) "Deadly weary." "So deadly cunning a man."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Deadly" Quotes from Famous Books



... was at work on the borders of the St. Lawrence that yearly rendered the Hurons more tractable. From raiding the settlements of the St. Lawrence, the Iroquois were sweeping in a scourge more deadly than smallpox up the Ottawa to the very forests of Georgian Bay. The Hurons no longer dared to go down to Quebec in swarming canoes. Only a few picked warriors—perhaps two hundred and fifty—would venture so near ...
— Canada: the Empire of the North - Being the Romantic Story of the New Dominion's Growth from Colony to Kingdom • Agnes C. Laut

... Crane replied in a level, deadly voice entirely unlike his usual tone. "That is one thing money can do. We will get him if money, influence, ...
— The Skylark of Space • Edward Elmer Smith and Lee Hawkins Garby

... had my black hour unseen. The world was a globe no longer, space was no more filled with whirling circuses of spheres. That day the old beliefs rose up and asserted themselves, and the earth was flat again—ditch-riddled, stagnant, and deadly flat. The undeviating roads crawled straight and white, elms dressed themselves stiffly along inflexible hedges, all nature, centrifugal no longer, sprawled flatly in lines out to its farthest edge, and ...
— Dream Days • Kenneth Grahame

... for, impelled by some fiend at my elbow, I had seized my whip by the small end, and—swift and sudden as a flash of lightning—brought the other down upon his head. It was not without a feeling of savage satisfaction that I beheld the instant, deadly pallor that overspread his face, and the few red drops that trickled down his forehead, while he reeled a moment in his saddle, and then fell backward to the ground. The pony, surprised to be so strangely relieved of its burden, started and capered, and kicked ...
— The Tenant of Wildfell Hall • Anne Bronte

... to rear little shelters of stone, behind which they were now crouching invisible and secure. With the illimitable patience of their savage training they had then waited, minute after minute, hour after hour, until, lulled at last into partial belief that their deadly foe had slipped away, some of the defenders should be emboldened to venture into view, and then one well-aimed volley at the signal from the leader's rifle, and the vengeful shafts of those who had as yet only the native weapon, would fall like lightning stroke upon the rash ...
— An Apache Princess - A Tale of the Indian Frontier • Charles King


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