homicide
This term carries a heavy legal and clinical weight, stripped of the emotional intensity found in words like murder or slaughter. It functions as a neutral category that encompasses everything from justifiable killings, like self-defense, to cold-blooded crimes. In a courtroom or a police report, it provides a technical classification of the act rather than a moral judgment of the intent. While murder implies malice and intent, homicide simply describes the physical result of one person causing the death of another. It is the umbrella term used by forensic pathologists and law enforcement to describe the event before a specific legal charge is determined.
Countable when referring to a specific instance of a killing (a homicide occurred). Uncountable when referring to the general legal category or the act of killing (homicide is a serious crime).