Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Dilapidation

Dilapidation , noun

[Latin dilapidatio: compare French dilapidation.]

1.
The act of dilapidating, or the state of being dilapidated, reduced to decay, partially ruined, or squandered.
Tell the people that are relived by the dilapidation of their public estate. — Burke
2.
Ecclesiastical waste; impairing of church property by an incumbent, through neglect or by intention.
The business of dilapidations came on between our bishop and the Archibishop of York. — Strype
3.
(Law) The pulling down of a building, or suffering it to fall or be in a state of decay. — Burrill