| rot | Process of rotting; decay; putrefaction | en |
| rot | unacceptable behavior (especially ludicrously false statements) | en |
| rot | break down; "The bodies decomposed in the heat" | en |
| rot | (biology) decaying caused by bacterial or fungal action | en |
| rot | decay usually accompanied by an offensive odor | en |
| rot | See 1st Fluke, 2 | en |
| rot | waste away; "Political prisoners are wasting away in many prisons all over the world" | en |
| rot | You can use the rot to refer to the way something gradually gets worse. For example, if you are talking about the time when the rot set in, you are talking about the time when a situation began to get steadily worse and worse. In many schools, the rot is beginning to set in. Standards are falling all the time | en |
| rot | The softening, discoloration and often disintegration of a succulent plant tissue as a result of fungal or bacterial infection | en |
| rot | The Rot is the passage from the first life into the second life; it is a decaying of the natural, defensive hypermasculine strategies for avoiding painful experience | en |
| rot | to decay, to become bad | en |
| rot | Wood that has come into contact with water or moisture and that consequentially swollen or decomposed | en |
| rot | Recorded off transmission Radio Stations are required by law to record everything broadcast and submit it to the Radio Authority if a complaint is made | en |
| rot | A persons current state of advancement | en |
| rot | If there is rot in something, especially something that is made of wood, parts of it have decayed and fallen apart. Investigations had revealed extensive rot in the beams under the ground floor | en |
| rot | If you say that someone is being left to rot in a particular place, especially in a prison, you mean that they are being left there and their physical and mental condition is being allowed to get worse and worse. Most governments simply leave the long-term jobless to rot on the dole. see also dry rot | en |
| rot | When food, wood, or another substance rots, or when something rots it, it becomes softer and is gradually destroyed. If we don't unload it soon, the grain will start rotting in the silos Sugary canned drinks rot your teeth | en |
| rot | below | en |
| rot | A disease or decay in fruits, leaves, or wood, supposed to be caused by minute fungi | en |
| rot | It is due to the presence of a parasitic worm in the liver or gall bladder | en |
| rot | A fatal distemper which attacks sheep and sometimes other animals | en |
| rot | To expose, as flax, to a process of maceration, etc | en |
| rot | See Bitter rot, Black rot, etc | en |
| rot | decay, putrefaction; breakdown, deterioration; nonsense, meaningless statements (Slang) isim | en |
| rot | for the purpose of separating the fiber; to ret | en |
| rot | To undergo a process common to organic substances by which they lose the cohesion of their parts and pass through certain chemical changes, giving off usually in some stages of the process more or less offensive odors; to become decomposed by a natural process; to putrefy; to decay | en |
| rot | decay, putrefy, spoil; speak nonsense, utter meaningless statements fiil | en |
| rot | To make putrid; to cause to be wholly or partially decomposed by natural processes; as, to rot vegetable fiber | en |
| rot | Figuratively: To perish slowly; to decay; to die; to become corrupt | en |
| rots | third person singular of rot | en |
| rotted | past of rot | en |
| rotted | damaged by decay; hence unsound and useless; "rotten floor boards"; "rotted beams"; "a decayed foundation" | en |
| rotted | Destroyed or damaged by rot | en |
| rotting | present participle of rot | en |