expiring

listen to the pronunciation of expiring
English - English
Present participle of expire
Ending, terminating, dying
Breathing out air from the lungs; emitting fluid or volatile matter; exhaling; breathing the last breath; dying; ending; terminating
Pertaining to, or uttered at, the time of dying; as, expiring words; expiring groans
expire
to exhale; to breathe (out)
expire
to exhale (something)

He escaped the garage and will expire the carbon monoxide he had been breathing.

expire
to become invalid

My library card will expire next week.

expire
{v} to breathe out, exhale, die, end, close
expire
When something such as a contract, deadline, or visa expires, it comes to an end or is no longer valid. He had lived illegally in the United States for five years after his visitor's visa expired. = run out
expire
To emit the breath
expire
lose validity; "My passports expired last month"
expire
pass from physical life and lose all all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life; "She died from cancer"; "They children perished in the fire"; "The patient went peacefully"
expire
The Collabra Server program that manages article expiration
expire
The date up to which a trader can exercise his option
expire
{f} come to an end, finish, terminate; die
expire
To give forth insensibly or gently, as a fluid or vapor; to emit in minute particles; to exhale; as, the earth expires a damp vapor; plants expire odors
expire
After a certain amount of time, Usenet postings can be set to expire, which means that they will be deleted even if they haven't been read, so that they don't waste space
expire
To emit the last breath; to breathe out the life; to die; as, to expire calmly; to expire in agony
expire
To come to an end; to cease; to terminate; to perish; to become extinct; as, the flame expired; his lease expires to-day; the month expired on Saturday
expire
expel air; "Exhale when you lift the weight"
expire
To breathe out; to emit from the lungs; to throw out from the mouth or nostrils in the process of respiration; - - opposed to inspire
expire
A subscriber who has let his subscription run out without renewing
expire
To burst forth; to fly out with a blast
expire
To emit; to give out
expire
As a verb, what happens when a subscription reaches the end of the period paid for without renewing As a noun, a subscription or group of subscriptions that run out on a certain date (“the January expires”) Expires may also refer to a list of expired subscribers Because expires are prime prospects for new offers, expire lists (also called “hold lists”) are valuable commodities
expire
to remove messages after a specified period of time
expire
The term used within the Space Management subsystem when an archived file needs to be removed from the system Archived data can be expired because the size of an individual archive exceeds a configured amount of disk space or the data is older than a site configured time limit
expire
to die
expire
What a system operator can make files do if they have been using up server space for too long Often applies to Usenet postings and unclaimed email
expire
A former customer who is no longer considered an active buyer
expire
Articles can not be held for eternity because of harddisk limits Because of this there is usually a program called expire on the most computer systems This program deletes all articles which are older than a configured number of days KNode includes this functionality on it's own
expire
To bring to a close; to terminate
expire
To label a document as "expired," or too old to serve to a client The proxy will retrieve a current copy directly from the content server the next time a client requests the document If the content server is unavailable, the expired document can still be served to the client with a message stating that it isn't current
expire
Former customer who no longer purchases goods or services
expire
to exhale something
expiring

    Hyphenation

    ex·pir·ing

    Turkish pronunciation

    îkspayrîng

    Pronunciation

    /əkˈspīrəɴɢ/ /ɪkˈspaɪrɪŋ/
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