Englishfor English speakers
die
Verb
—
If a person or animal dies, it stops living.
My father died last year in a car crash, I really miss him.
The song is about her brother who died young at the age of ten.
Many more people die of heart attacks than from violence.
She died from being sick.
—
If something dies, it stops existing.
The idea died once the money was all gone.
Rock and roll will never die.
—
If a machine dies, it stops working.
The car died suddenly on the highway.
My computer died on me over the weekend.
—
If you're dying for something, you want it very much.
I'm dying for a chance to meet him.
die
Noun
—
A die is a piece of metal or other hard material used to shape, cut, or mold a product.
die
Noun
—
A die is a cube, each side of which is marked with a different number of spots from 1 to 6.
Charlie
properNoun
—
A en given name
—
A diminutive of the en given name Charles; also used as a formal given name.
—
A diminutive of the en given name Charlotte or Charlene, also used as a formal given name, although less common than the male name.
—
The letter C in the NATO phonetic alphabet.
—
the letter "C" in a national spelling alphabet
Charlie
noun
—
(military slang) An enemy; the Vietcong; short for Victor Charlie.
—
(uncountable, slang) Cocaine.
—
(countable, chiefly, UK, slang, often with "right" and/or "proper") A fool.
—
(slang, usually, _, in the plural) A woman's breast
—
(dated) A nightwatchman.
—
fool