出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/02 02:31 UTC 版)
From un- + alive. Internet usage originates from circumventing systems that were believed to censor or sanction the words related to death, especially “die”, “kill”, and “suicide”.
According to linguist Adam Aleksic, the word in the verb sense of “die, kill” first appeared in a 2013 episode of Ultimate Spider-Man, exploding in usage after a few viral videos in early 2021 popularized it. Since early 2022, unalive has become very widespread even outside Internet usage contexts, especially among adolescents. Aleksic argues that the word unalive has gained so much popularity because of a time-invariant tendency to refer to death by euphemism; compare the word die’s displacement of swelt, or the use of pass away.
unalive (comparative more unalive, superlative most unalive)
unalive (plural unalives)
unalive (third-person singular simple present unalives, present participle unaliving, simple past and past participle unalived) (chiefly Internet slang, proscribed, algospeak, nonstandard or euphemistic)