Reverse Dictionary: ROT

ADJECTIVES
— AMPERY of things, as cheese: rotten, beginning to decay → 1790 Eng. dial.
— ASS-HOLE bad, rotten → 20C US
— DADDOCKY decayed, rotten → 1852 Eng. dial.
— DARRICKY rotten, decayed → 1851 Eng. dial.
— DICKY of vegetable matter: rotten, decayed → Bk1900 Eng. dial.
— DODACKY — DODDERKY of wood: decayed rotten → 1900 Eng. dial. (Bk.)
— FRACID more then ripe, rotten from over-ripeness, hoary and putrefied → 1655 obs.
— FULL-FLAVOURED really rotten; obscene → sl.
— GONE AND FORGOTTEN rotten → 20C Aust. rhyming sl.
— JOHNNY COTTON rotten → 20C rhyming sl.
— MARCID withered, wasted, decayed, rotten → 1656 obs.
— MARCIDIOUS rotten, decayed, withered; feeble, weak, exhausted → 1656 obs. rare
— MULLOCKY dirty, untidy; rotten → 1839 Eng. dial.
— MUSH rotten → Bk1913-17 Amer. dial.
— NEEDLE AND COTTON rotten → 1992 UK rhyming sl.
— OFF LIKE A BUCKET OF PRAWNS extremely rotten; stinking → Aust. sl.
— OFF LIKE A BUCKET OF PRAWNS IN THE HOT SUN stinking, rotten → 1960s Aust. sl.
— OFF LIKE A BUCKET OF PRAWNS IN THE MIDDAY SUN extremely rotten; stinking → Aust. sl.
— OLD musty, rotten; fetid → Bk1905 Eng. dial.
— PUNK of timber: decayed, rotten → 1902 US
— PUNKY of a poor quality; bad, rotten → 1859
— PURY rotten, decomposed; formed by decomposition → 1602 obs.
— PUTID physically rotten, putrid → 1660
— PUTREDINOUS characterized by putrefaction; having an offensive smell; stinking; rotten → 1641 obs.
— PUTRESCIBLE liable to rot
— PUTRIBLE liable to rot → 1425 obs.
— PUTRILAGINOUS undergoing or marked by putrefaction; rotting, putrid → 1598 obs.
— RAIT rotten → 1851 Eng. dial.
— RIXY of wood: rickety, rotten → B1900 Eng. dial.
— JUZZLED rotted away → B1900 Eng. dial.

NOUNS
— DADDOCK rotten wood; a rotten log → 1845 Amer. dial.
— MARCIDITY a wasted or withered condition; leanness, the want of flesh; rottenness → 1658 obs. rare
— MINGLETY-PUR a mass of corruption and rottenness → Bk1903 Eng. dial.  
— PUTREDE rottenness; putridity; also, pus → 1400 obs.
— PUTRIDNESS moral corruption; decadence; rottenness; unpleasantness, uselessness → 1823
— PUTRITUDE a being putrid or rotten; putridity → 1617 obs.
— PUTRITURE putrefaction; putridity, rottenness → 1569 obs.

VERBS
— CORRUMP to decompose; to cause to rot or decay → 1340 obs.
— DAISE to wither; to become rotten or spoiled from keeping, dampness, etc. → 1825 Sc.
— FUNK to rot, to spoil, to become mouldy → 1829 obs.
— GO TO DADDOCKS to be utterly rotten, to go to pieces → 1887 Eng. dial.
— MOOTNAFEE to decay, to rot → 1898 Sc.
— ROTY to make rotten → 1387 obs.
— FUNK to rot, to spoil, to become mouldy → 1829 obs. rare
— PALL to decay, to waste away, to rot → c1475 obs. rare
— RAIT to cause to rot or to injure by exposure → Bk1905 Eng. dial.
— TO-ROT to rot utterly → 1382 obs.
— WROX to decay or rot → 1649 obs. exc. Eng. dial.