milan2003_07
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2011
- Member Type
- Academic
- Native Language
- Russian
- Home Country
- Russian Federation
- Current Location
- Russian Federation
Hello,
The word "succumb" often means the same as "to die" when the result is death. However as far as I've understood from the dictionary, "succumb" can also mean "to yield to something" and not always "to die". For example:
1) She succumbed to cancer in spite of 5 year fight with thisdisease = She died of cancer because cancer is usually a deadly disease
2) She succumbed to injury and was unable to play within the next two yeras = She didn't die, but her injury prevented her from playing
3) He succumbed to a disease and was soon registered as a disable = She got crippled (because of TB, for example), but she didn't die.
Are my explanations correct?
How about "to succumb to disease"? Can it mean both "to die of a disease" and "to be affected by it, but survive"
Best
The word "succumb" often means the same as "to die" when the result is death. However as far as I've understood from the dictionary, "succumb" can also mean "to yield to something" and not always "to die". For example:
1) She succumbed to cancer in spite of 5 year fight with thisdisease = She died of cancer because cancer is usually a deadly disease
2) She succumbed to injury and was unable to play within the next two yeras = She didn't die, but her injury prevented her from playing
3) He succumbed to a disease and was soon registered as a disable = She got crippled (because of TB, for example), but she didn't die.
Are my explanations correct?
How about "to succumb to disease"? Can it mean both "to die of a disease" and "to be affected by it, but survive"
Best