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.
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.
demisedepartextinctionpassingperishdropcease
demise
bury or cremate them
fallecimiento
Generally not.
ADHD and dyslexia
That is the correct spelling of the verb "decease" (to die), which is almost never used as a verb, except as pre-decease, compared to the adjective deceased.The similar word is disease, an illness or affliction.
I would think the root word is "Cease." Like in the sentence "Cease to exist." I may be wrong, though.
decease
no,of course not
yeah it is...