Moribund in a sentence as an adjective

It's no more moribund now than it was before.

Rushcheck is a bit moribund, or was last time i checked.

There's clearly heaps of work going on. It's not a moribund project.

Those three projects are either moribund or unportable, as predicted by the Curse.

If the web is so moribund that its health relies on convincing individual hackers not to do things they think would be cool, then the web is doomed.

To fight this recession the Fed needs more than a snapback; it needs soaring household spending to offset moribund business investment.

I know it's a radical idea, since these people wouldn't be "ideas guys".Oh well, no such people seem to exist, too bad for the clearly moribund startup industry.

What really bothers me is what he advocates...To fight this recession the Fed needs more than a snapback; it needs soaring household spending to offset moribund business investment.

In a world where developers at places like Amazon have been putting huge numbers of people out of work, and the tech industry cheers this as high-value disruption of moribund industries, developers who think they should be immune to the same forces are breathtaking in their arrogance.

""But to the extent that individual academics continue in their lust for power and prestige by vying for exclusive spots in elite journals, they should not be surprised to find themselves as irrelevant and moribund indeed, zombie-like as print monographs have already become, warns Fitzpatrick.

This part of the Act says, in effect, "we realize that the IPO market has been moribund ever since SOX was enacted and, because part of the reason is the heavy regulatory burdens imposed by SOX, we will seek to encourage more IPOs by giving issuers more incentive to go public without having to face huge expenses right out the gate.

I think there is an arrogance problem, and it arises when MBAs from Ivy League schools, lawyers who worked their way through the byzantine federal government legal and lobbying system, Hollywood moguls who have mostly fueled their careers on deceptive accounting, and heads of large moribund media organizations, suddenly decide that they need to get in on this whole tech thing, almost invariably at the executive level, yet lack even basic knowledge of how computers, the internet, software, or for that matter, online marketing, work.

Moribund definitions

adjective

not growing or changing; without force or vitality

See also: stagnant

adjective

being on the point of death; breathing your last; "a moribund patient"