the.com/undead
Dead enough to stop paying taxes, alive enough to ruin your evening.
means Describes a being that has died but still moves, hungers, or haunts — neither properly living nor decently buried.
from Old English prefix 'un-' slapped onto 'dead'; popularized by Bram Stoker's Dracula in 1897, where the vampire is famously 'Un-Dead.'
Stoker's titleDracula was nearly named The Un-Dead.
Grammar quirkDouble negative that means worse than either word.
Broad churchCovers vampires, zombies, ghouls, liches, and revenants.