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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
derelict
I.adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a derelict building (=empty and in very bad condition)
▪ Near the canal there are a number of derelict buildings.
vacant/derelictBritish English (= unused)
▪ The houses could be built on derelict land.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
building
▪ Sandra paints from photographs she takes of old, often derelict buildings.
▪ The latter was now a veritable ghost town with its derelict buildings holding up false-front facades in the fashion of Hollywood sets.
▪ In adjacent streets, there are disused and even derelict buildings which would far better repay investment.
▪ Hotel deal Mr Pratt said they have already bought and renovated another derelict building in the same area.
▪ I mean people who are sleeping in parks and doorways, in derelict buildings and under railway arches.
▪ Development plan policies should also encourage the reuse of derelict buildings.
house
▪ He heard a click and stepped back quickly as the bolt thudded into the wall of the derelict house behind him.
▪ It had also kept him from going back to his derelict house in the scrap yard and taking Dooley with him.
▪ Over his shoulder she was looking at the derelict house.
▪ Every where it forms thickets: on derelict houses, along roadsides, on wasteground.
▪ We spent several nights there in a derelict house without a roof.
▪ The former had come to Chant in a derelict house in Clerkenwell; about that there was no ambiguity.
land
▪ Where possible we use derelict land first - for instance this estate here was built on the site of a factory.
▪ Looks at patterns of development, the approach of house builders to derelict land, and brownfield risk analysis.
▪ The new facilities will be sited in a former rundown building in Main Street and on adjoining derelict land.
▪ But one has to be careful, a piece of derelict land can be like a magnet in attracting further dereliction.
▪ Maybe if they had we would have transformed a piece of derelict land.
▪ They involve a variety of practical conservation activities - energy-saving, waste recycling and the greening of derelict land.
▪ And whilst derelict land supports the activities of man it provides a home for plants and animals.
site
▪ This must be coupled with the creation of an attractive environment, through the transformation of derelict sites.
▪ Glasgow's industrial history has left many large derelict sites.
▪ Margaret Thatcher's governments encouraged the old nationalised industries to sell derelict sites which retailers snapped up for building superstores.
▪ He thought of the derelict site and the broken wall.
▪ A young man walked across the derelict site and hesitated as he reached Tony's car.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
derelict homes and businesses
▪ In the middle of town is a derelict building that used to be the school.
▪ The land behind the factory is stony and derelict.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ An' the entire derelict bloody city an' all.
▪ It includes derelict factories and some of the poorest housing in the country.
▪ Now they've been given a derelict school building, gutted by fire, for their new community association.
▪ Sandra paints from photographs she takes of old, often derelict buildings.
▪ The derelict PBYs were thoroughly exploded for the film.
▪ The site has been derelict since the 1960s, when the old gas works was demolished.
▪ This had become a wilderness of weeds and bushes but hidden deep inside was a derelict conservatory demanding to be restored.
▪ Today the site of the Mill is derelict.
II.noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Dons were no longer the comic derelicts that flit through Victorian fiction or the novels of Evelyn Waugh.
▪ He seemed to take for granted that she would share his views on the derelicts.
▪ Most witches were women, often aged derelicts who wielded great influence over the people.
▪ The neighborhood is dominated by the Waterloo train station and peopled by derelicts late at night.
▪ The park was swarming with students and drug dealers, tourists and derelicts.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Derelict

Derelict \Der"e*lict\, n. (Law)

  1. A thing voluntary abandoned or willfully cast away by its proper owner, especially a ship abandoned at sea.

  2. A tract of land left dry by the sea, and fit for cultivation or use.

Derelict

Derelict \Der"e*lict\, a. [L. derelictus, p. p. of derelinquere to forsake wholly, to abandon; de- + relinquere to leave. See Relinquish.]

  1. Given up or forsaken by the natural owner or guardian; left and abandoned; as, derelict lands.

    The affections which these exposed or derelict children bear to their mothers, have no grounds of nature or assiduity but civility and opinion.
    --Jer. Taylor.

  2. Lost; adrift; hence, wanting; careless; neglectful; unfaithful.

    They easily prevailed, so as to seize upon the vacant, unoccupied, and derelict minds of his [Chatham's] friends; and instantly they turned the vessel wholly out of the course of his policy.
    --Burke.

    A government which is either unable or unwilling to redress such wrongs is derelict to its highest duties.
    --J. Buchanan.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
derelict

1640s, from Latin derelictus "solitary, deserted," past participle of dereliquere "to abandon, forsake, desert," from de- "entirely" + relinquere "leave behind" (see relinquish). Originally especially of vessels abandoned at sea or stranded on shore. As a noun, from 1660s.

Wiktionary
derelict

a. abandoned, forsake; given up or forsaken by the natural owner or guardian; (of a ship) abandoned at sea, dilapidated, neglected; (of a spacecraft) abandoned in outer space. n. Property abandoned by its former owner, especially a ship abandoned at sea.

WordNet
derelict
  1. adj. deserted or abandoned as by an owner; "a derelict ship"

  2. failing in what duty requires; "derelict (or delinquent) in his duty"; "neglectful of his duties"; "remiss of you not to pay your bills" [syn: delinquent, neglectful, remiss]

derelict
  1. n. a person unable to support himself

  2. a ship abandoned on the high seas [syn: abandoned ship]

Wikipedia
Derelict

Derelict may refer to:

Derelict (film)

Derelict is a 1930 American Pre-Code adventure film directed by Rowland V. Lee and written by Grover Jones and William Slavens McNutt. The film stars George Bancroft, Jessie Royce Landis and William "Stage" Boyd. The film was released on November 22, 1930, by Paramount Pictures.

Usage examples of "derelict".

Heavy surf pounded the beaches, small craft took shelter behind the block-ships, all work stopped, ships anchored off shore dragged anchors and fouled one another, beaching craft were driven ashore, Mulberry A began to break up, and the crash of small craft, dukws, vehicles and derelict units grinding together was heard above the din of war.

Haynes remembered one incident, when he and Bucca were checking a crack house in a derelict building.

The lab shuttle raced off in pursuit, but the drogue derelict was out of control, tumbling and wheeling like a Chinese fireworks display.

He raised his right thumb toward where Tippoo Tip stood on the veranda of the derelict duka and as he returned the salute, the Hind rose vertically above the village and swung its nose toward the north.

The fact that a coastguard was the first on board may save some complications later on, in the Admiralty Court, for coastguards cannot claim the salvage which is the right of the first civilian entering on a derelict.

Ordinarily he was true to the derelict type -- ready to do anything for a nickel or a dose of whiskey or hasheesh -- but at rare intervals he shewed the traits which earned him his name.

In many cases, the loess had spilled over the tops, completely filling the passenger compartments and giving the craft the distinct impression of derelicts.

These wards were filled with derelicts: old women with dementia, impecunious veterans down on their luck, noseless men with tertiary syphilis and the like.

Satisfied that he could do it, he continued refining that skill, riping criminals, derelicts, and the mentally unstable into loyal drones, all eager to make that suicidal time jump and be entombed forever in the earth, all to build his little home.

Not the immense Americanised strip at Wodden, with its ever-increasing new runway extensions disappearing into the far distance, but Wodden as it must have been after the war: empty hangars and derelict huts with broken windows, and weeds spreading along the runway joints.

Carrie Tanner had decided that this yeaf she was going to try her hardest to coax Fred into buying the derelict property next door.

Winnebago and three mobile homes parked on a derelict farm about a mile outside of Tower, on the Blarney road.

These pieces dated to the fifteenth and sixteenth century, and must have come to the Sargasso on derelicts of that era.

Some of them, of course, had never seen anything but this great raft of derelicts which was the moldering heart of the Sargasso Sea.

Like a gigantic black serpent lifting its somber head to have a look over the Sargasso, it reared above the derelict.