obituary

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
obituary
    n 1: a notice of someone's death; usually includes a short
         biography [syn: {obituary}, {obit}, {necrology}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Obituary \O*bit"u*a*ry\, a. [See {Obit}.]
   Of or pertaining to the death of a person or persons; as, an
   obituary notice; obituary poetry.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
obituary \o*bit"u*a*ry\, n.; pl. {Obituaries}. [Cf. F.
   obituaire. See {Obit}.]
   1. That which pertains to, or is called forth by, the obit or
      death of a person; esp., an account of a deceased person.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. Especially: A notice of the death of a person, published
      in a newspaper or other periodical, accompanied by a
      biographical sketch which may be brief ro extended; as,
      the funeral director arranged placed an obituary in the
      local papaer.
      [1913 Webster +PJC]

   3. pl. The section of a newspaper in which obituaries[2] are
      printed; as, I saw the notice of his death in the
      obituaries.
      [PJC]

   4. (R. C. Ch.) A list of the dead, or a register of
      anniversary days when service is performed for the dead.
      [1913 Webster]
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
120 Moby Thesaurus words for "obituary":
      Clio, Muse of history, adventures, annals, arch, archival,
      autobiography, barrow, bill of mortality, biographical sketch,
      biography, body count, boundary stone, brass, bust, cairn,
      case history, casualty list, cenotaph, chronicle, chronicles,
      chronology, cinerary, column, confessions, cromlech, cross, cup,
      curriculum vitae, cyclolith, death roll, diary, dirgelike, dismal,
      documental, documentary, documentational, dolmen, epigraphic,
      epitaphic, eulogy, exequial, experiences, feral, footstone,
      fortunes, funebrial, funebrious, funebrous, funeral, funerary,
      funereal, grave, gravestone, hagiography, hagiology, headstone,
      historiography, history, hoarstone, inscription, journal, legend,
      life, life and letters, life story, marker, martyrology, mausoleum,
      megalith, memento, memoir, memoirs, memorabilia, memorial,
      memorial arch, memorial column, memorial statue, memorial stone,
      memorials, menhir, monolith, monument, mortuary, mortuary roll,
      mound, mournful, necrological, necrologue, necrology, obelisk,
      obit, obsequial, photobiography, pillar, plaque, prize, profile,
      pyramid, record, register of deaths, reliquary, remembrance,
      resume, ribbon, rostral column, sepulchral, shaft, shrine, stela,
      stone, story, stupa, tablet, testimonial, theory of history, tomb,
      tombstone, tope, trophy

    
from Who Was Who: 5000 B. C. to Date
OBITUARY

Bryan, William Jennings, of U. S. A.
Cannon, Joseph G., of U. S. Congress.
Castro, Cipriano, of Venezuela Asphalt Trust.
Cavalieri, Lina, of Paris and New York City.
Cook, Doctor Fred.  A., of New York City and Denmark.
Dewey, George E., of U. S. N.
Diaz, Perfiro, of Mexico.
Din, Gunga, of Kipling.
Dreyfus, Captain, of France.
Fallieres, Armand, of the French Republic.
Gorky, Maxime, of Russia.
Hafid, Mulai, of Morocco.
Hamed, Abdul, of Turkey.
Hammerstein, Oscar, of New York City and London.
Holmes, Sherlock, of Doyle.
Huerta, V., General of Mexico.
Irish Home Rule, of Ireland and London.
Johnson, Jack, of U. S. A.
Lloyd-George, David, of England.
Manuel, King, of Portugal.
Pankhurst, Mrs., of England.
Patti, Adelina, of Wales.
Roberts, Frederick S., of Kandohr.
Rojesvensky, Admiral, of Russia.
Roosevelt, Theodore, of "The Outlook."
Shackelton, Earnest, of England.
Shuster, Morgan, of Persia.
Sulzer, William, of Tammany Fall.
Taft, William Howard, of Cincinnati, U. S. A.
Time, Father, of Everywhere.
Turkey.
Widow, Merry, of Paris, London, and New York City.
    

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