Search Result for "deadly": 
Wordnet 3.0

ADJECTIVE (6)

1. causing or capable of causing death;
- Example: "a fatal accident"
- Example: "a deadly enemy"
- Example: "mortal combat"
- Example: "a mortal illness"
[syn: deadly, deathly, mortal]

2. of an instrument of certain death;
- Example: "deadly poisons"
- Example: "lethal weapon"
- Example: "a lethal injection"
[syn: deadly, lethal]

3. extremely poisonous or injurious; producing venom;
- Example: "venomous snakes"
- Example: "a virulent insect bite"
[syn: deadly, venomous, virulent]

4. involving loss of divine grace or spiritual death;
- Example: "the seven deadly sins"
[syn: deadly, mortal(a)]

5. exceedingly harmful;
[syn: baneful, deadly, pernicious, pestilent]

6. (of a disease) having a rapid course and violent effect;


ADVERB (2)

1. as if dead;
[syn: deadly, lifelessly]

2. (used as intensives) extremely;
- Example: "she was madly in love"
- Example: "deadly dull"
- Example: "deadly earnest"
- Example: "deucedly clever"
- Example: "insanely jealous"
[syn: madly, insanely, deadly, deucedly, devilishly]


The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

deadly \dead"ly\, a. 1. Capable of causing death; mortal; fatal; destructive; certain or likely to cause death; as, a deadly blow or wound. [1913 Webster] 2. Aiming or willing to destroy; implacable; desperately hostile; flagitious; as, deadly enemies. [1913 Webster] Thy assailant is quick, skillful, and deadly. --Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. Subject to death; mortal. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] The image of a deadly man. --Wyclif (Rom. i. 23). [1913 Webster] Deadly nightshade (Bot.), a poisonous plant; belladonna. See under Nightshade. [1913 Webster]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

deadly \dead"ly\, adv. 1. In a manner resembling, or as if produced by, death; deathly. "Deadly pale." --Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. In a manner to occasion death; mortally. [1913 Webster] The groanings of a deadly wounded man. --Ezek. xxx. 24. [1913 Webster] 3. In an implacable manner; destructively. [1913 Webster] 4. Extremely. [Obs.] "Deadly weary." --Orrery. "So deadly cunning a man." --Arbuthnot. [1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):

deadly adv 1: as if dead [syn: deadly, lifelessly] 2: (used as intensives) extremely; "she was madly in love"; "deadly dull"; "deadly earnest"; "deucedly clever"; "insanely jealous" [syn: madly, insanely, deadly, deucedly, devilishly] adj 1: causing or capable of causing death; "a fatal accident"; "a deadly enemy"; "mortal combat"; "a mortal illness" [syn: deadly, deathly, mortal] 2: of an instrument of certain death; "deadly poisons"; "lethal weapon"; "a lethal injection" [syn: deadly, lethal] 3: extremely poisonous or injurious; producing venom; "venomous snakes"; "a virulent insect bite" [syn: deadly, venomous, virulent] 4: involving loss of divine grace or spiritual death; "the seven deadly sins" [syn: deadly, mortal(a)] 5: exceedingly harmful [syn: baneful, deadly, pernicious, pestilent] 6: (of a disease) having a rapid course and violent effect
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:

213 Moby Thesaurus words for "deadly": a la mort, abominably, accurate, agonizingly, ashen, awful, awfully, baldly, baleful, balefully, baneful, barbaric, barbarous, bitterly, blatantly, bloodthirsty, blue, boring, brashly, brutal, cadaverous, calamitous, cataclysmal, cataclysmic, catastrophic, catching, cold-blooded, communicable, confoundedly, consuming, consumptive, contagious, corpselike, corroding, corrosive, corrupting, corruptive, counterproductive, cruelly, damaging, damnably, dangerous, dead, deadened, death-bringing, deathful, deathlike, deathly, deathly pale, deleterious, demolishing, demolitionary, depredatory, desolating, destroying, destructive, detrimental, deucedly, devastating, disadvantageous, disastrous, disserviceable, distressing, distressingly, dolorously, doomful, dreadful, dreadfully, dreary, dull, eerie, egregiously, envenomed, exact, excessively, excruciating, excruciatingly, exorbitantly, extravagantly, fatal, fateful, fearful, feral, ferocious, flagrantly, fratricidal, frightful, frightfully, ghastly, ghostlike, ghostly, grievously, grisly, gruesome, haggard, harmful, heartless, hellishly, homicidal, horrible, horribly, howling, humdrum, hurtful, implacable, improperly, inexcusably, infectious, infective, infernally, inhuman, injurious, inordinately, internecine, intolerably, killing, lamentably, lethal, livid, lurid, macabre, malefic, malevolent, malign, malignant, mephitic, merciless, miasmal, miasmatic, miasmic, mischievous, miserably, mortal, mortuary, murderous, nakedly, nihilist, nihilistic, noisome, noxious, ominous, openly, painfully, pale, pallid, pernicious, pestiferous, pestilent, pestilential, piteously, pitiless, poisonous, precise, prejudicial, ravaging, rousing, ruining, ruinous, ruthless, sadly, savage, scatheful, self-destructive, shatteringly, shockingly, slaying, something awful, something fierce, sorely, staggeringly, subversionary, subversive, suicidal, tedious, terrible, terribly, terrific, thumping, tiresome, to the death, torturously, toxic, toxicant, toxiferous, true, unashamedly, unbearably, uncanny, unconscionably, unduly, unearthly, unerring, unfailing, unpardonably, vandalic, vandalish, vandalistic, venenate, veneniferous, venenous, venomous, vicious, virulent, wan, wasteful, wasting, wearisome, wearying, weird, whacking, white, withering, woefully