human death
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A death of a human being: The event of a person's life ending.
- A death resulting from an accident or a disaster: A fatality caused by an unintended or catastrophic event.
Usage
- The term "human death" is used in formal, statistical, or analytical contexts to specifically refer to the mortality of people, often to distinguish it from other types of death (e.g., animal death, cell death) or to quantify loss in tragedies.
- It is typically used as a countable noun (e.g., ).
Examples
- Noun:
- The earthquake caused thousands of human deaths.
- The report analyzed the leading causes of human death in the region.
- Every human death from preventable disease is a tragedy.
Advanced Usage
- "human death toll": The total number of people killed in a specific incident or over a period.
- The human death toll from the pandemic continues to rise.
- Used in legal and medical discourse to specify the subject of investigation or study.
- The coroner's duty is to determine the cause of human death.
Variants and Related Words
- Fatality (n): A death resulting from an accident, disaster, or violence. Often used interchangeably with "human death" in contexts like traffic accidents.
- There was one fatality in the crash.
- Mortality (n): The state of being subject to death; also refers to the death rate in a population.
- Infant mortality has decreased significantly.
- Casualty (n): A person killed or injured in a war or accident. (Note: Can include injured, not just deaths).
- The battle resulted in heavy casualties.
Synonyms
- Fatality
- Demise (more formal or gentle)
- Passing (euphemistic)
Antonyms
- Birth
- Life
Related Phrases
- Cause of death: The specific injury or disease that leads to a human death.
- The cause of death was listed as heart failure.
- Untimely death: A human death that occurs unexpectedly or at a young age.
- He met an untimely death in a car accident.
Noun
- a death resulting from an accident or a disaster
- a decrease in the number of automobile fatalities