What's the difference between inanimate and lifeless?

Inanimate


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To animate.
  • (a.) Not animate; destitute of life or spirit; lifeless; dead; inactive; dull; as, stones and earth are inanimate substances.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The local inanimate environment, including mess hut, sleeping huts and sleeping bags used on expeditions, was searched for contamination by S. aureus but none was detected.
  • (2) The rats also had the opportunity to make noncontingent target biting responses on an inanimate target.
  • (3) The subjects' fears reflected the trauma, they feared inanimate objects, and there were hardly any paranoid ideations.
  • (4) In standardized tests of huddling behavior, 5-, 10-, 15-, and 20-day-old rat pups spent substantial and equivalent amounts of time with an immobile rat or a heated, fur-covered tube, which suggests that the conspecific and inanimate stimuli were equally attractive to the pups.
  • (5) The animals learned to discriminate between pictures of faces or inanimate objects, to select the odd face from a group, to inspect a face then select the matching face from a pair of faces after a variable delay, to discriminate between novel and familiar faces, and to identify specific faces.
  • (6) They are even absorbed by inanimate elements, or by ordinary objects of everyday life.
  • (7) The chloramphenicol-treated cells, as well as cells of a transposon-generated mutant strain deficient in peripheral EPS formation, remained adhesive to a hydrophobic inanimate surface during the initial 5 h of starvation, whereas nontreated wild-type cells had progressively decreased adhesion capacity.
  • (8) The use of this technique results in high titers of virus on cover slips, which are inanimate objects requiring minimal manipulation.
  • (9) Results for inanimate objects agree within 1 percent with comparable measurements by water displacement.
  • (10) It is highly unlikely that the essence of the process lies in its computational logic and hence it can never be produced by inanimate machines.
  • (11) The ventilation system, air conditioning plant, air and inanimate sources in the operating theatre were investigated.
  • (12) The ecosystem encloses all living organisms as well as the inanimate environment (e.g.
  • (13) Germans are applauded in the language we use to describe well-functioning inanimate objects, such as Mercedes cars, or Miele dishwashers.
  • (14) In inanimate sources, P4 was predominant in water and sewage effluent.
  • (15) The usefulness of S. marcescens biotyping was shown by relating several isolates recovered from patients and their inanimate environment and by pointing out the possible existence of infections or colonizations by two unrelated biotypes.
  • (16) I’ve always been fascinated by how these inanimate objects harness this explosion.
  • (17) Visual fixation time was compared for events in which an inanimate object moved independently and events in which a human being was the agent.
  • (18) Texts were carried out on strains derived from the respiratory tract, strains from infection at other sites, and strains from the inanimate hospital environment which were believed not to have been responsible for infection ('environmental' strains).
  • (19) Infant observation indicated that there is an individual variation in development characterized by orientedness either toward the animate or toward the inanimate world.
  • (20) Similar to the modern sculptor of inanimate art forms, plastic surgeons have utilized new materials and devised new techniques to achieve aesthetic improvement of the face, trunk, and extremities.

Lifeless


Definition:

  • (a.) Destitute of life, or deprived of life; not containing, or inhabited by, living beings or vegetation; dead, or apparently dead; spiritless; powerless; dull; as, a lifeless carcass; lifeless matter; a lifeless desert; a lifeless wine; a lifeless story.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He was put on a gurney and he was lifeless,” she said.
  • (2) It all started with a problem Wolf was having in her own sex life; the quality of her orgasms suddenly changed from being full of light and colour and what she describes in terms of transcendental experience, to something dull and lifeless.
  • (3) Southall and coworkers have demonstrated in a recent study that attacks of lifelessness with sudden and severe hypoxemia and cyanosis are caused by a combination of respiratory arrest in expiration, and a right-to-left shunting of the blood through the lungs due to increased pulmonary vascular resistance.
  • (4) She felt hollow and lifeless and compared herself to the calm centre of a tornado, "moving dully along in the middle of the surrounding hullabaloo", she writes.
  • (5) From start to finish, maybe apart from the first five minutes, it was a pretty lifeless performance,” Muscat said.
  • (6) The mastiff fell lifeless and Stapleton was swallowed in Grimpen Mire.
  • (7) Perhaps, the evolution of medicine has eclipsed what was once sensational, disturbing, interesting, and marketable, leaving only the dry and lifeless bones of stories--remnants of what once they were.
  • (8) It is physiology's responsibility to put together the lifeless pieces of the molecular biologist into living systems.
  • (9) Several men from the local fire department and EMT department are already there, hovering around the seemingly lifeless body of a 31-year-old man on the living room floor in a soaking wet T-shirt and jeans.
  • (10) The latest tragedies follow the death of a Syrian toddler whose lifeless body was photographed washed up on a Turkish beach last week, becoming a heartwrenching symbol of the plight of asylum seekers fleeing war.
  • (11) Hidalgo, currently deputy mayor of Paris and the pollsters' favourite to win the municipal election in March, caused a storm when she announced she wanted to transform Avenue Foch, which some critics have described as a "lifeless urban motorway", into a "green corridor" leading straight to the neighbouring Bois de Boulogne public park.
  • (12) In a variety of new situations under the beaker (presence of a lifeless object, of a grouped mouse or of an isolated mouse), the isolated mice were more reactive than the grouped mice.
  • (13) Aggressive treatment, including emergency room thoracotomy, is justified for lifeless and deteriorating cardiac injury victims.
  • (14) Now that I’m rewilding my once-lifeless garden, I’m hoping to be surprised.
  • (15) These laws will be used to stamp out plurality and difference, to douse the exuberance of youth, to pursue children for the crime of being young and together in a public place, to help turn this nation into a money-making monoculture, controlled, homogenised, lifeless, strifeless and bland.
  • (16) The US can either use the lifeless tissue for transplants or for other research or it can throw it away.
  • (17) Early Thursday morning, one penguin was spotted floating lifelessly in the pool.
  • (18) But soon after returning, “there is no energy and you are lifeless and you are dull”.
  • (19) Emergency room thoracotomy was performed in 17 "lifeless" patients, 4 of whom survived.
  • (20) Economic turmoil, a lifeless advertising market and print publications folding across the industry - it is a strange time to launch a magazine.