Adjective
six feet under
(idiomatic, euphemistic) Buried six feet underground; not alive; dead.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:dead
My grandparents are six feet under.
Nothing excites compassion, in friend and foe alike, as much as the sight of you ker-splonked on the Tarmac with your propeller buried six feet under. Boris Johnson
I really wanted to be on Six Feet Under as a corpse. That would be hysterical. Michael Stipe
Speeches are for the younger men who are going places. And I'm not going anyplace except six feet under the floor of that little chapel adjoining the museum and library at Abilene. Dwight D. Eisenhower
Home, Ms. Lane?” His deep voice was gently amused. "I have to call it something,” I said morosely. "They say home is where the heart is. I think mine's satin-lined and six feet under. Karen Marie Moning
I wouldn't want the pressure of a Six Feet Under or the pressure of improvising like Curb Your Enthusiasm. Robert Englund
Bo, Leebs and I were the bits, six feet under the surface, wrestling with branches, pushing at a boat weighed down by the force of the oncoming current and desperately struggling to get away from the darkness and into the light. Source: Internet