English

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Verb

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die roaring (third-person singular simple present dies roaring, present participle dying roaring, simple past and past participle died roaring)

  1. (Ireland, colloquial, dated) die in agony, especially as divine punishment for a wicked life
    • 1910, Patrick Weston Joyce, “Comparisons”, in English as we speak it in Ireland[1], London: Longmans, Green, page 137:
      May you die roaring like Doran's bull!
    • 1939 March, Frank O'Connor, “First Confession”, in Harper's Bazaar:
      "Did you ever see a fellow hanged?"
      "I saw dozens of them," he assured me solemnly, "and they all died roaring."
    • 1997 September 13, “The court of Malachy”, in The Irish Times[2]:
      The genial, white-haired Malachy also enthralled the audience with grim jokes about how Henry VIII and Randolph Churchill died roaring from syphillis.
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