Need another word that means the same as “decompose”? Find 20 synonyms and 30 related words for “decompose” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Decompose” are: break down, break up, decay, disintegrate, molder, moulder, rot, putrefy, go bad, go off, spoil, fester, perish, deteriorate, degrade, break apart, fall apart, fragment, crumble, dissolve
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “decompose” as a verb can have the following definitions:
break apart | Fall sharply. |
break down | Break down literally or metaphorically. |
break up | Fall sharply. |
crumble | Fall into decay or ruin. The cookies crumbled. |
decay | Undergo decay or decomposition. The moral authority of the party was decaying. |
degrade | Wear down (rock) and cause it to disintegrate. The bacteria will degrade hydrocarbons. |
deteriorate | Grow worse. If the situation continues to deteriorate the consequences could be severe. |
disintegrate | Lose strength or cohesion and gradually fail. It has become a relatively easy matter to disintegrate almost any atom. |
dissolve | Declare void. She suddenly dissolved into floods of tears. |
fall apart | Come under, be classified or included. |
fester | (of a wound or sore) become septic; suppurate. I developed a tropical sore that festered badly. |
fragment | Break or cause to break into fragments. Management has tighter control through fragmenting the tasks. |
go bad | Have a particular form. |
go off | Pass, fare, or elapse; of a certain state of affairs or action. |
molder | Break down. |
moulder | Break down. The books if any are ever printed will moulder in the warehouse. |
perish | Suffer complete ruin or destruction. The children perished in the fire. |
putrefy | Become putrid; decay with an offensive smell. The body was beginning to putrefy. |
rot | Gradually deteriorate, especially through neglect. The education system has been allowed to rot. |
spoil | (of food) become unfit for eating. He is spoiling for a fight. |
belittle | Dismiss (someone or something) as unimportant. She belittled Amy s riding skills whenever she could. |
corpse | Cause (an actor) to forget their lines and start laughing. One singer ad libbed and corpsed his colleagues on stage. |
corrupt | Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality. The corrupting smell of death. |
corruptive | Tending to corrupt or pervert. |
decay | An inferior state resulting from the process of decaying. Fluoride heals small spots of decay. |
decomposition | Separation of a substance into two or more substances that may differ from each other and from the original substance. The decomposition of organic waste. |
deconstruct | Analyse a text or linguistic or conceptual system by deconstruction. I want to deconstruct this myth that poverty breeds crime. |
depravity | A corrupt or depraved or degenerate act or practice. Its brothels its opium parlors its depravity. |
deteriorate | Become progressively worse. Relations between the countries had deteriorated sharply. |
disassemble | Take apart into its constituent pieces. The piston can be disassembled for transport. |
disband | Stop functioning or cohering as a unit. The unit was scheduled to disband. |
disintegrate | Break into parts or components or lose cohesion or unity. Our shoes had to last until they disintegrated on our feet. |
disintegration | The spontaneous disintegration of a radioactive substance along with the emission of ionizing radiation. A disintegration of personality. |
dismantle | Tear down so as to make flat with the ground. The old regime was dismantled. |
dismember | Divide into pieces. The tiger dismembered the tourist. |
dissolution | The termination or disintegration of a relationship (between persons or nations. The dissolution of their marriage. |
dissolve | Annul or end (a partnership or marriage. Dissolve a stock cube in a pint of hot water. |
erosive | Wearing away by friction. The erosive effects of waves on the shoreline. |
foul | Hit a foul ball. Foul language. |
iron | Smooth clothes sheets etc with an iron. She stood there ironing. |
malodorous | Smelling very unpleasant. Leaking taps and malodorous drains. |
molder | Break down. |
perishable | (of something abstract) having a brief life or significance; transitory. The storage of perishable foods. |
putrefaction | The process of decay or rotting in a body or other organic matter. Rome had fallen into moral putrefaction. |
putrescent | Undergoing the process of decay; rotting. The odour of putrescent flesh. |
putrid | Morally corrupt or evil. The cocktail is a putrid pink colour. |
rot | Rotten or decayed matter. The chalets were neglected and their woodwork was rotting away. |
rotten | Damaged by decay; hence unsound and useless. Rotten floor boards. |
solvable | Capable of being solved. Such problems are perfectly solvable. |
spoilage | Waste produced by material being spoilt, especially paper that is spoilt in printing. |
The synonyms and related words of "Brag" are: blow, bluster, boast, gas, gasconade, shoot a…
The synonyms and related words of "Pierce" are: thrust, make a hole in, penetrate, puncture,…
The synonyms and related words of "Weary" are: aweary, tired, tired out, exhausted, fatigued, overtired,…
The synonyms and related words of "Kick" are: complain, kvetch, plain, quetch, sound off, give…
The synonyms and related words of "Useless" are: futile, pointless, purposeless, impractical, vain, in vain,…
Want to describe something with adjectives that start with 'J'? Though they are not numerous,…