no,of course not
The only difference between them is in number of syllables.
green leaves is good for all kind decease
It means death, as an event . "Before his decease he was walking around".
burn the bodies
As black as death, as black as night, as black like darkness itself.... um as black as an emo..
Departure, especially departure from this life; death., To depart from this life; to die; to pass away.
In the US, alimony terminates upon death. If there is back alimony due that's a different matter.
Crushed to death under a wagon. It's a bit ironic in the Alanis Morissette kind of way.
A homophone for "decease" is "decease," which sounds the same but has different meanings. In this context, it refers to the act of dying or the state of being deceased. However, there is no commonly used homophone that fits the criteria, as "decease" primarily stands alone in pronunciation.
The legalese noun decease, or "death" in plain speech, is a back-formation from the adjective deceased( i.e. dead), borrowed from the Norman French deces, derived from the Latin decessus, past participle of the verb decedere to fall down, to die.
Another name for the plague is the black death