dilapidate
v. கட்டிடத்தை இடித்துத் தகர், பொருள்களைப் பாழாக்கு, சொத்துக்களைச் சீர்கெடுவி, துணிமணியைக் கிழித்து உருக்குலை, அக்கு அக்காகப் பிய்த்தெறி.v. விரிவாக்க, அகலப்படுத்து, பெரிதாக்கு,. எல்லாப் பக்கங்களில பரப்பு, விரிவுற, அகலமாகு, எல்லாப் புறங்களிலும் பரவு, விரித்துரை, விரிவாக எழுது, வருணி.
Di*lap"i*date, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Dilapidated; p. pr. & vb. n. Dilapidating.] Etym: [L. dilapidare to scatter like stones; di- = dis- + lapidare to throw stones, fr. lapis a stone. See Lapidary.] 1. To bring into a condition of decay or partial ruin, by misuse or through neglect; to destroy the fairness and good condition of; -- said of a building. If the bishop, parson, or vicar, etc., dilapidates the buildings, or cuts down the timber of the patrimony. Blackstone. 2. To impair by waste and abuse; to squander. The patrimony of the bishopric of Oxon was much dilapidated. Wood. Di*lap"i*date, v. i. Defn: To get out of repair; to fall into partial ruin; to become decayed; as, the church was suffered to dilapidate. Johnson. Di*lap"i*date, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Dilapidated; p. pr. & vb. n. Dilapidating.] Etym: [L. dilapidare to scatter like stones; di- = dis- + lapidare to throw stones, fr. lapis a stone. See Lapidary.] 1. To bring into a condition of decay or partial ruin, by misuse or through neglect; to destroy the fairness and good condition of; -- said of a building. If the bishop, parson, or vicar, etc., dilapidates the buildings, or cuts down the timber of the patrimony. Blackstone. 2. To impair by waste and abuse; to squander. The patrimony of the bishopric of Oxon was much dilapidated. Wood. Di*lap"i*date, v. i. Defn: To get out of repair; to fall into partial ruin; to become decayed; as, the church was suffered to dilapidate. Johnson.