Expression
|
Definition
|
Context
|
Notes
|
At peace[1]
|
Dead
|
Euphemistic
|
|
At rest[1]
|
Dead
|
Polite
|
|
Augered in
|
Died via aircraft crash
|
Slang
|
As documented in The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe
|
Belly up[1]
|
Dead
|
Informal
|
The orientation of fish when dead
|
Beyond the grave[1]
|
After death
|
Neutral
|
In reference to communication with the dead
|
Beyond the veil[2]
|
The mysterious place after death
|
Neutral
|
Originally used to refer to the 'veil' that hides the innermost sanctuary of the Temple in Jerusalem. Sometimes refers to just a mysterious place.
|
Big sleep[2]
|
To die or be killed
|
Euphemistic
|
Could be in reference to Raymond Chandler's 'The Big Sleep'
|
Bite the dust[2]
|
To die or be killed
|
Informal
|
Also means 'failed'
|
Bite the big one[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
North American.
|
Born asleep
|
Stillbirth
|
Neutral
|
|
Breathe one's last[1]
|
To die
|
Literary
|
|
Brown bread[3]
|
Dead
|
Slang
|
Cockney rhyming slang for 'dead'.
|
Bought the farm[2]
|
Died
|
Slang
|
Also, shortened to 'bought it'
|
Bucket list
|
List of things to do before dying
|
Popular culture derivation
|
Derived from the older phrase "kick the bucket"; popularized by the 2007 film The Bucket List
|
Cargo 200
|
Corpses of soldiers
|
Military slang
|
Military code word used in the Soviet Union and the post-Soviet states referring to the transportation of military casualties
|
Cark-it[4]
|
To die
|
Informal, another version of 'croaked it'; common in UK, Ireland, Australia & New Zealand
|
The guy was running, had a heart attack and carked it.
|
Cash in one's chips[2]
|
To die
|
Informal, euphemistic[5]
|
Redemption for cash of gambling counters at the end of a game
|
Catching the bus[6]
|
To commit suicide
|
Slang
|
Originated from the Usenet newsgroup alt.suicide.holiday
|
Charon
|
Ferryman of Hades
|
Neutral
|
Crosses the rivers Styx and Acheron which divide the world of the living from the world of the dead
|
Check out
|
To die
|
Euphemism
|
|
Choir Invisible
|
To die
|
Humorous
|
British. "Join the choir invisible" Monty Python Dead Parrot Sketch.
|
Come to a sticky end[1]
|
To die in a way that is considered unpleasant
|
Humorous
|
British. Also 'to meet a sticky end'.
|
Counting worms[5]
|
Dead
|
Euphemistic
|
|
Croak[7]
|
To die
|
Slang
|
|
Crossed the Jordan
|
Died
|
Biblical/Revivalist
|
The deceased has entered the Promised Land (i.e. Heaven)
|
Curtains
|
Death
|
Theatrical
|
The final curtain at a dramatic performance
|
Dead as a dodo[2]
|
Dead
|
Informal
|
The 'dodo', flightless bird from the island of Mauritius hunted to extinction
|
Dead as a doornail[1]
|
Obviously dead
|
Informal
|
Charles Dickens used this phrase at the beginning of A Christmas Carol.
|
Death by misadventure
|
Avoidable death
|
Formal/legal
|
Death resulting from risk-taking
|
Decapitation
|
The act of killing by removing a person's head, usually with an axe or other bladed instrument
|
|
A much-favoured method of execution used around the world. Notable examples include the French Revolution via guillotine, and the Tudor times using an axe.
|
Deleted
|
Murdered
|
Literary
|
|
Defenestration
|
The act of killing by throwing a person out of a window
|
|
|
Departed[1]
|
To die
|
Neutral
|
|
Destroyed
|
To die
|
Neutral
|
Usually refers to the humane killing of an animal
|
Die in a hole
|
To die
|
Slang
|
Usually used when annoyed at someone
|
Die with one's boots on
|
To die while able, or during activity, as opposed to in infirmity or while asleep.
|
Euphemistic
|
Old West usage: To die in a gunfight, as with the film They Died with Their Boots On. Also connotes dying in combat. British; cf. Iron Maiden's Die With Your Boots On.
|
Didn't make it
|
Killed in action (see below)
|
Euphemistic
|
|
Done for[1]
|
About to die
|
Neutral
|
|
Drop dead[1]
|
Die suddenly
|
Neutral
|
also slang aggressive dismissal
|
Dropping like flies[8]
|
Dying in droves
|
Simile
|
also falling ill in numbers
|
Drop the Body
|
Died
|
Euphemistic
|
Used by new-age spiritually minded people instead of the term died, suggesting that, while the person's body died, his or her spirit lives on
|
Entered the homeland
|
1950s Grave England
|
Euphemistic
|
|
Eaten a twinkie[citation needed]
|
Die
|
Humorous
|
Relates to a perception among Australians that American food (Twinkies being a quintessential example) is toxic, due to its use of such ingredients (not used in Australian-made products) as high-fructose corn syrup.
|
Erased
|
Murdered
|
Literary
|
|
Euthanasia
|
Assisted suicide
|
Formal
|
|
Expire
|
Natural end
|
Neutral
|
|
Exterminate
|
Kill
|
Directive
|
Exclaimed by Daleks (from Doctor Who) when ordered to kill
|
Extinct
|
When a species as a whole ceases to exist
|
Formal
|
|
Fading away[1]
|
To be weakening and close to death
|
Neutral
|
Also to be 'fading fast'
|
Fall off one's perch[9]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
|
Fall off the toilet
|
To die, often in an untimely or unexpected manner
|
Informal
|
|
Food for worms[2]
|
Someone who is dead
|
Slang
|
Also 'worm food'
|
Fratricide
|
Murder among siblings
|
Formal
|
|
Free one's horses
|
To die
|
Neutral
|
|
Game end
|
To kill
|
Informal
|
|
Genocide
|
To completely exterminate all of a kind
|
Formal
|
|
Get smoked
|
To be killed
|
Slang
|
|
Give up the ghost[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
The soul leaving the body
|
Glue factory
|
To die
|
Neutral
|
Usually refers to the death of a horse
|
Gone to a better place[10]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
Heaven
|
Go over the Big Ridge[11]
|
To die
|
Unknown
|
|
Go bung[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
Australian. Also means 'to fail' or 'to go bankrupt'.
|
Go for a Burton
|
To die/break irreparably
|
Informal
|
British, from WWII.
|
Go to Davy Jones's locker[2]
|
To drown or otherwise die at sea
|
Euphemistic
|
Peregrine Pickle describes Davy Jones as 'the fiend that presides over all the evil spirits of the deep'.
|
Go to the big [place] in the sky
|
To die and go to heaven
|
Informal
|
A place in the afterlife paralleling the deceased's life, such as "Big ranch in the sky".[12]
|
Go home in a box[13]
|
To be shipped to one's birthplace, dead
|
Slang, euphemistic[5]
|
|
Go out with one's boots on/with a bang/in style
|
To die while doing something enjoyed
|
Informal
|
|
Go to, or head for, the last roundup[11]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
Associated with dying cowboys, along with "Going to that big ranch in the sky."
|
Go to one's reward[2]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
Final reckoning, just deserts after death
|
Go to one's watery grave[1]
|
To die of drowning
|
Literary
|
|
Go to a Texas cakewalk[11]
|
To be hanged
|
Unknown
|
|
Go the way of all flesh[2]
|
To die
|
Neutral
|
|
Go west[2]
|
To be killed or lost
|
Informal
|
Refers to the sun setting at the west.
|
The Grim Reaper[2]
|
Personification of death
|
Cultural
|
A skeleton with a scythe, often in a cloak. Also commonly truncated to just "The Reaper".
|
Hand in one's dinner pail[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
No longer required at workmen's canteen
|
Happy hunting ground
|
Dead
|
Informal
|
Used to describe the afterlife according to Native Americans
|
Hara-kiri
|
(Ritual) suicide by disembowelment
|
Japanese
|
See Seppuku. Often misspelled as Hari-kari.
|
Have one foot in the grave[2]
|
To be close to death because of illness or age
|
Informal, sometimes humorous
|
|
History
|
Dead
|
Informal
|
Usually interpreted as "to be history."
|
(Get) Hit by a bus
|
To die suddenly and prematurely
|
Informal
|
|
Hop on the last rattler[5]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
"Rattler" is a slang expression for a freight train.
|
Hop the twig[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
Also 'to hop the stick'. Pagan belief that to jump a stick on the ground leads to the Afterworld.
|
In Abraham's bosom[2]
|
In heaven
|
Neutral
|
From the Holy Bible, Luke 16:22.
|
It's clipped
|
To die/be killed
|
Slang
|
New York Slang for saying something is over.
|
Join the choir invisible[14]
|
To die
|
Neutral
|
From an 1867 poem by George Eliot. Referenced in the Monty Python Dead Parrot Sketch, also see Choir Invisible.
|
Join the great majority[2]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
First used by Edward Young, but the phrase 'the majority' is extremely old.
|
Justifiable homicide
|
Homicide
|
Formal
|
A deliberate homicide that is not a criminal act because the surrounding circumstances justified the use of deadly force. Defending oneself against a deadly attack, for example, or conducting a legally ordered execution.
|
Kermit (suicide)
|
To commit suicide, usually via falling from a great height
|
Humorous
|
Originated from a remixed video of Kermit the Frog from Sesame Street and a Kermit the Frog doll falling off a building.[15]
|
Kick the bucket[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
In suicidal hanging.[16] Also 'kick off' (American).[1]
|
Kick the calendar
|
To die
|
Slang, informal
|
Polish saying. 'Calendar' implies somebody's time of death (kicking at particular moment of time)
|
Killed In Action (KIA)
|
Death of military personnel due to enemy action
|
Military language, official and informal use
|
|
King of Terrors[2]
|
Personification of death
|
Neutral
|
Of Biblical origin, found in Job 18:14 Also refers to death itself
|
Kiss one's arse goodbye
|
Prepare to die
|
Slang
|
|
Late[17]
|
Used to refer to the recently dead[17]
|
Euphemism[17]
|
|
Lay waste
|
To kill
|
slang
|
|
Lights out
|
To die
|
Slang
|
Going into Eternal Oblivion
|
Liquidation
|
To be killed
|
Euphemism
|
Usually used in political context (such as purges), implies dehumanization.
|
Live on a farm (upstate)
|
To die
|
Euphemism
|
Usually referring to the death of a pet, especially if the owners are parents with children, i.e. "The dog went to live on a farm."
|
Lose one's life[1]
|
To die in an accident or violent event
|
Neutral
|
|
Lost
|
To die in an accident or violent event
|
|
|
Make the ultimate sacrifice[1]
|
To die while fighting for a cause
|
Formal
|
Also 'make the supreme sacrifice'
|
Matricide
|
Mother murdered
|
Formal
|
|
Meet one's maker[2]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
According to Christian belief, soul meets God for final judgment
|
Merc
|
Homicide
|
Slang
|
Also short for mercenary
|
Murder Death Kill (MDK)
|
Homicide
|
TV/Movie
|
From 1993 film Demolition Man
|
Night
|
The state of death
|
Euphemism
|
From the poem by Dylan Thomas, "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night."
|
Not long for this world[1]
|
Will die soon; have little time left to live
|
Old-fashioned
|
|
Not with us anymore
|
Dead
|
Euphemistic
|
|
Off on a boat[5]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
Viking
|
Off the hooks[2]
|
Dead
|
Informal
|
British. Not to be confused with 'off the hook' (no longer in trouble).
|
On one's deathbed[1]
|
Dying
|
Neutral
|
|
On one's last legs[2]
|
About to die
|
Informal
|
|
On the wrong side of the grass
|
Dead
|
Euphemistic slang
|
Refers to the practice of burying the dead. Such individuals are below the grass as opposed to above it, hence being on the "wrong side".
|
One's hour has come[1]
|
About to die
|
Literary
|
|
One's number is up[1]
|
One is going to die
|
Slang
|
|
Oofed
|
To die
|
Humorous
|
Popularized from the video game Roblox; likely invented to circumvent in-game chat filters. When referring to suicide, one may "oof themselves".
|
Pass away[1]
|
To die
|
Euphemism; polite
|
Also 'to pass on'
|
Pass in one's alley[2]
|
To die
|
Informal
|
Australian
|
Patricide
|
Father murdered
|
Formal
|
|
Pay the ultimate price[1]
|
To die for a cause or principle
|
Neutral
|
Similar to "To make the ultimate sacrifice"
|
Peg out[1]
|
To die
|
Slang
|
British. Also means 'to stop working'
|
Peppered
|
To be shot to death
|
Slang
|
Usually refers to being shot multiple times (i.e. peppered with bullet holes).
|
Perish
|
Synonym for death
|
Neutral
|
|
Pop one's clogs[2]
|
To die
|
Humorous,[1] Informal[2]
|
British. "Pop" is English slang for "pawn." A 19th-century working man might tell his family to take his clothes to the pawn shop to pay for his funeral, with his clogs among the most valuable items.
|
Promoted to Glory
|
Death of a Salvationist
|
Formal
|
Salvation Army terminology.
|
Pull the plug[2]
|
To kill, or allow to die
|
Euphemism
|
Removal of life support, such as turning off the power, or "pull the plug" on a ventilator keeping someone alive.
|
Pumped full of lead
|
Shot to death
|
Informal
|
Typically refers to being shot multiple times.
|
Push up daisies[2]
|
To have died and be buried under the ground
|
Humorous,[1] Euphemistic[5]
|
Early 20th century—also 'under the daisies', and 'turn one's toes up to the daisies', which date back to the mid-19th century. (See 'to turn up one's toes' below.)
|
Put down/put to sleep
|
To be euthanised
|
Euphemism
|
Euthanasia of an animal
|
Put one to the sword
|
To kill someone
|
Literary
|
|
Rainbow Bridge
|
Dead
|
Euphemism
|
Usually referring to the death of a pet, e.g. "Crossing the Rainbow Bridge."
|
Reset character
|
To die
|
Euphemistic slang
|
Refers to video games where "resetting one's character" involves deliberately killing them and letting them respawn or load from a save.
|
Ride the pale horse[5]
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
In the Biblical passage Revelation 6:8, a pale horse is ridden by Death, one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. The expression "behold a pale horse" has been used as the title of a 1964 film by Fred Zinnemann and a 1991 book by ufologist William Milton Cooper.
|
Run one through
|
To kill someone, usually by stabbing
|
Euphemism
|
|
Send one to Eternity or to the Promised Land
|
To kill someone
|
Literary
|
|
Go/send to Belize
|
To die/to kill somebody
|
Euphemism
|
From Season 5 of the television series Breaking Bad
|
Send (or go) to the farm
|
To die
|
Euphemism
|
Usually referring to the death of a pet, especially if the owners are parents of young children e.g. "The dog was sent to a farm."
|
Sewerslide
|
To commit suicide
|
Humorous
|
21st-century slang. Likely invented to circumvent internet censorship.
|
Shade
|
The state of death
|
Euphemism
|
From the poem "Invictus," by William Ernest Henley: "Beyond this place of wrath and tears, Looms but the horror of the shade."
|
Shake hands with Elvis
|
To die
|
Euphemism
|
Shake hands with a well-known person who has (presumably) died.
|
Shuffle off this mortal coil[1]
|
To die
|
Humorous, Literary[2]
|
From the To be, or not to be soliloquy from Shakespeare's Hamlet.
|
Six feet under[2]
|
Dead
|
Informal
|
Six feet is the traditional depth of a grave
|
Sleeping with the fishes
|
Murdered, then disposed of in water.
|
Slang
|
Popularized by The Godfather
|
Slipped away
|
To die peacefully
|
Slang
|
Possibly originated from the poem "Death is Nothing at All" written by Reverend Henry Scott Holland in 1910 following the death of King Edward VII.
|
Snuffed out
|
Murdered
|
Literary
|
As in extinguishing a candle, or simply "snuff it"
|
Step off
|
To die
|
Informal, euphemistic
|
Character Ron Birdwell in the movie The Late Show (1977): "I'm always sorry to hear any of God's creatures stepping off."
|
Struck down[1]
|
To be killed by an illness
|
Neutral
|
Usually passive
|
Suicide
|
To take one's own life
|
Formal
|
|
Sunset
|
Dead
|
Formal
|
|
Swim with concrete shoes
|
Gangster murder
|
Slang
|
|
Take a dirt nap[18]
|
To die and be buried
|
Slang
|
|
Take a last bow[5]
|
To die
|
Slang
|
|
Take one's own life
|
To commit suicide
|
Euphemism
|
|
Take/took the easy way out[19]
|
To commit suicide
|
Euphemism
|
Based on the original meaning of the phrase of taking the path of least resistance.
|
Take the last train to glory[2]
|
To die
|
Euphemism
|
An idiom Christian in origin.
|
Tango Uniform [citation needed]
|
Dead, irreversibly broken
|
Military slang
|
This is "T.U." in the NATO phonetic alphabet, an abbreviation for Tits Up (which is itself an euphemism for an airplane crash).
|
Terminate; especially, terminate with extreme prejudice
|
To kill; especially when carrying out an assassination as part of a covert operation.
|
Euphemism; military slang
|
Originated during the Vietnam War; later popularized by the films Apocalypse Now and The Terminator
|
The Big Adios
|
To die
|
Euphemistic slang
|
Ex: "Live life to the fullest before the big Adios!"
|
To join the whisperers
|
To die
|
Euphemism
|
From the television series Lost: the Whispers were voices of those who died, yet were unable to move on and therefore remained on the island as whispers
|
Toaster bath
|
Committing suicide via dropping an active toaster in a bathtub
|
21st-century slang
|
|
Topped yourself
|
Committed suicide
|
Slang
|
|
Turn up one's toes[2]
|
To die
|
Slang
|
An alternative of 'turn one's toes up to the daisies' (see 'push up daisies' above.)
|
Unalive (also un-alive)
|
To die, or to kill
|
Euphemistic slang
|
A euphemism that developed in slang on social media, particularly TikTok, to avoid censorship of the words "kill" and "die."
|
Unsubscribe from life
|
To die
|
Euphemistic
|
21st century slang
|
Up and die
|
Unexpected death, leaving loose ends
|
Euphemistic
|
|
Waste[20]
|
To kill
|
Slang
|
|
Wearing a pine overcoat (i.e. a wooden coffin)[citation needed]
|
Dead
|
Slang
|
Idiom used by American gangsters of the early 20th century.
|
Wiped out
|
Dead, usually if multiple individuals die
|
Neutral
|
|
Worm food or worm bait
|
Dead
|
Slang
|
|