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An affliction is something that causes pain and mental suffering, especially a medical condition.
Amenities are things that make a place comfortable or easy to live in, such as hot water, updated bathrooms, and sports facilities.
Something antiquated is old-fashioned and not suitable for modern needs or conditions.
A commodious room or house is large and roomy, which makes it convenient and highly suitable for living.
A convalescent person spends time resting to gain health and strength after a serious illness or operation.
Something that has curative properties can be used for curing people’s illnesses.
Debility is a state of being physically or mentally weak, usually due to illness.
Something, such as a building, is derelict if it is empty, not used, and in bad condition or disrepair.
A dilapidated building, vehicle, etc. is old, broken-down, and in very bad condition.
An effervescent individual is lively, very happy, and enthusiastic.
A person or animal that is emaciated is extremely thin because of a serious illness or lack of food.
If you feel enervated, you feel very tired and weak—almost to the point of collapse.
If something is formidable, it is impressive in size, power, or skill; therefore, it can make you feel frightened, alarmed, or in awe because it is so powerful or difficult to deal with.
If something is your forte, you are very good at it or know a lot about it.
Someone who has a haggard appearance looks very tired, worn, thin, and exhausted.
A patient who is plagued by infirmity is weak in body or ill in health.
A languid person is slow, relaxed, and shows little energy or interest in doing anything.
Lassitude is a state of tiredness, lack of energy, and having little interest in what’s going on around you.
If you are lethargic, you are tired, lack energy, and are unwilling to exert effort.
When you are listless, you lack energy and interest and are unwilling to exert any effort.
Malaise is a feeling of discontent, general unease, or even illness in a person or group for which there does not seem to be a quick and easy solution because the cause of it is not clear.
If you mitigate something that causes harm, you reduce the harmful or painful effects of it.
An organization or system that is a monolith is extremely large; additionally, it is unwilling or very slow to change or adopt something new.
An omnipotent being is unlimited in its power.
When you renovate something, such as a home or other building, you modernize or make it like new again.
A resurgence is a rising again or comeback of something.
A salubrious place or area is pleasant, clean, healthy, and comfortable to live in.
A salutary experience can be unpleasant or difficult; nevertheless, it is useful for or of benefit to you because it strengthens your character.
Something or someone that is senescent is becoming old and showing the effects of getting older.
Something that is superannuated is so old and worn out that it is no longer working or useful.
Therapeutic treatment is used to heal or treat patients who have a disease or other ailment.
If your body is affected by torpor, you are severely lacking in energy; therefore, you are idle—and can even be numb.
An unkempt person or thing is untidy and has not been kept neat.
A wizened person is very old, shrunken with age, and has a lot of wrinkles on their skin.
Noun
decrepitude
di-KREP-i-tood
Context
The old house, which Jane had inherited from her aging grandmother, was in a ruined and crumbling state of decrepitude. Its antique porch steps and railing had fallen into a broken state of decrepitude over the years, and Jane could barely enter the front door. The run-down house seemed feeble and decrepit, as if it had been sick along with her ailing grandmother.
Decrepitude is the state of being very old, worn out, or very ill; therefore, something or someone is no longer in good physical condition or good health.
Deep in the CrudePit In one backward society I once studied, old things or even elderly people having fallen into a state of decrepitude were hurled deep into a crudepit, where they would be forgotten forever.
Examples
'To postpone and do nothing is perhaps a sign of maturity, but equally of old age and decrepitude,' Ambassador Nirupam Sen told the assembly.
—
The Christian Science Monitor
The Dairy Dream era was the time of U.S. Route 66, commissioned in 1926 and decommissioned in 1985, mostly left to decrepitude in Galena and other places where it was the local Main Street.
—
The Washington Post
This balance — seeing beauty through the decrepitude, and finding that danger doesn’t always lurk where it is expected — says Haj, is central to the visitor’s experience of 'Palestine.'
—
The Christian Science Monitor
There were few presidencies quite as accidental as Gerald Ford’s — in every sense — and it is perhaps no accident that this house stands as a monument only to decay and decrepitude.
—
The Washington Post
A building or person in a state of decrepitude has the “quality” of being “thoroughly cracked or burst.”
Word Constellation
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Related Words
affliction ·
antiquated ·
debility ·
derelict ·
dilapidated ·
emaciated ·
enervate ·
haggard+ ·
infirmity+ ·
languid ·
lassitude ·
lethargic ·
listless ·
malaise ·
senescent ·
superannuated ·
torpor ·
unkempt ·
wizened ·
amenity ·
commodious ·
convalescent ·
curative ·
effervescent ·
formidable ·
forte ·
mitigate ·
monolith ·
omnipotent+ ·
renovate+ ·
resurgence+ ·
salubrious ·
salutary ·
therapeutic+ ·
Similar sense
Opposite sense
Word Variants
decrepit
adj
→
feeble; weak; broken down
The section lists important variants and alternate definitions of the headword. Knowing variants will often help you both remember and understand the word. Not all variants are listed - only the ones we think that are important for you to know.