释义 |
Definition of eviscerate in English: eviscerateverb ɪˈvɪsəreɪtəˈvɪsəˌreɪt [with object]formal 1Disembowel (a person or animal) 〈正式〉取出(人或动物)的内脏 the goat had been skinned and neatly eviscerated 山羊被剥去了皮,内脏被干净利落地取了出来。 Example sentencesExamples - In addition to eviscerating an occasional cow here and there, our men will spread out over the planet's fields of grain to create wonderful patterns.
- Please note I will be forced to eviscerate you in the process.
- A soldier attacked, and was eviscerated within seconds.
- Argue the acceptable character of the terrorist attack, and you are rightly eviscerated.
- These ranged from insult and hyperbole to completely destroying property and literally eviscerating enemies.
- Too bad there's not a button you can press to eviscerate someone.
- Right outside the door was the body of a dog, skinned and eviscerated, the organs neatly arranged in a set pattern.
- The man in the grey turtleneck eviscerates poor Jonah - or would have, if Jonah possessed viscera.
- Caesar beheaded one man, and eviscerated another.
- The Palestinians, caught in the ensuing whirlwind, were eviscerated, displaced, denigrated, and driven to desperation.
- It was a new thing, that they could eviscerate him when they caught him.
- Maybe their next challenge could be to eviscerate him with embroidery scissors and knit something out of the guy's entrails.
- The fact that his educational opportunities expanded as a result of the same event that psychically eviscerated his father is compelling, but the theme is dropped.
- He had been feeling through the inside, just right at the edge where the killer had eviscerated the dog, when he felt a slight aberration in the internal lining.
- ‘I've never seen so many eviscerated people and terrible wounds in my life,’ said Rabab, 19, a nurse at the international hospital in Sharm el-Sheikh.
Synonyms disembowel, gut, remove the innards from, draw, dress rare embowel, disbowel, exenterate, gralloch, paunch - 1.1 Deprive (something) of its essential content.
抽去…的精华;挫伤…的元气 myriad little concessions that would eviscerate the project 将会挫伤项目元气的无数个小的让步。 Example sentencesExamples - An appellate tribunal overturned the original opinion that had eviscerated free speech rights.
- He lied us into two hideously unfair tax cuts; he lied us into an unnecessary war with disastrous consequences; he lied us into the Patriot Act, eviscerating our freedoms.
- Today, as democratic politics is eviscerated into marketing alone, it is assumed that this candidate deserves to win.
- The real issue today is how to beat the insurgency without eviscerating the American military to do it.
- As one might expect, he's wasting no time eviscerating the sports media.
- Extending terms of existing copyrights eviscerates this deal, granting a windfall to corporate copyright holders and heirs of famous artists in exchange for nothing, since the creators are mostly dead.
- It takes a lot of chutzpah to denounce the unhealthy influence of campaign contributions at the exact moment you are eviscerating the spirit of our campaign laws.
- An all-file-sharing environment would eviscerate the capital resources that make the technological development possible, and probably drive up the average cost to home-recorders considerably.
- He learned from it, for here he eviscerates American culture as he defines class distinctions.
- He both eviscerates the Democrats' arguments and puts the issue in Constitutional perspective.
- Rather than a lack of will, what Latin America suffers from is a set of interlocking institutional crises that eviscerate the democratic order without necessarily promoting dictatorship.
- He is simply an unwitting victim of circumstance; a convenient scapegoat for eviscerating the rule of law.
- Should patents on research tools that have no significant market outside the research community be subject to a research exemption that effectively eviscerates their commercial value?
- The disease is not only devastating families and communities; it is eviscerating national economies.
- Giving ‘disposal’ passive content would eviscerate that plain purpose.
- But content owners have raised legitimate questions about the scope and effect of these measures, and concerns about whether they would eviscerate their copyright protection technologies must be addressed.
- But, Brandon says, courts have essentially eviscerated this part of the 21st Amendment - good for economic liberty but bad interpretation of the constitutional text.
- The government's proposed monitoring would have eviscerated the attorney-client privilege.
- None of these possibilities are likely to unfold, however, if the promise of economic security for retirement is eviscerated in the meantime.
- Third, this is also the argument against ‘triggers’ that end the tax cuts if the deficit dwindles, because it eviscerates the restraints on government growth imposed by the tax cuts.
- 1.2Surgery Remove the contents of (the eyeball).
〔外科〕取出(眼球)内的东西
OriginLate 16th century: from Latin eviscerat- 'disembowelled', from the verb eviscerare, from e- (variant of ex-) 'out' + viscera 'internal organs'. Definition of eviscerate in US English: eviscerateverbəˈvisəˌrātəˈvɪsəˌreɪt [with object]formal 1Disembowel (a person or animal) 〈正式〉取出(人或动物)的内脏 the goat had been skinned and neatly eviscerated 山羊被剥去了皮,内脏被干净利落地取了出来。 Example sentencesExamples - Too bad there's not a button you can press to eviscerate someone.
- Argue the acceptable character of the terrorist attack, and you are rightly eviscerated.
- Please note I will be forced to eviscerate you in the process.
- The fact that his educational opportunities expanded as a result of the same event that psychically eviscerated his father is compelling, but the theme is dropped.
- A soldier attacked, and was eviscerated within seconds.
- He had been feeling through the inside, just right at the edge where the killer had eviscerated the dog, when he felt a slight aberration in the internal lining.
- These ranged from insult and hyperbole to completely destroying property and literally eviscerating enemies.
- The Palestinians, caught in the ensuing whirlwind, were eviscerated, displaced, denigrated, and driven to desperation.
- In addition to eviscerating an occasional cow here and there, our men will spread out over the planet's fields of grain to create wonderful patterns.
- The man in the grey turtleneck eviscerates poor Jonah - or would have, if Jonah possessed viscera.
- ‘I've never seen so many eviscerated people and terrible wounds in my life,’ said Rabab, 19, a nurse at the international hospital in Sharm el-Sheikh.
- Right outside the door was the body of a dog, skinned and eviscerated, the organs neatly arranged in a set pattern.
- It was a new thing, that they could eviscerate him when they caught him.
- Maybe their next challenge could be to eviscerate him with embroidery scissors and knit something out of the guy's entrails.
- Caesar beheaded one man, and eviscerated another.
Synonyms disembowel, gut, remove the innards from, draw, dress - 1.1 Deprive (something) of its essential content.
抽去…的精华;挫伤…的元气 myriad little concessions that would eviscerate the project 将会挫伤项目元气的无数个小的让步。 Example sentencesExamples - The disease is not only devastating families and communities; it is eviscerating national economies.
- An all-file-sharing environment would eviscerate the capital resources that make the technological development possible, and probably drive up the average cost to home-recorders considerably.
- Should patents on research tools that have no significant market outside the research community be subject to a research exemption that effectively eviscerates their commercial value?
- But, Brandon says, courts have essentially eviscerated this part of the 21st Amendment - good for economic liberty but bad interpretation of the constitutional text.
- But content owners have raised legitimate questions about the scope and effect of these measures, and concerns about whether they would eviscerate their copyright protection technologies must be addressed.
- Today, as democratic politics is eviscerated into marketing alone, it is assumed that this candidate deserves to win.
- Extending terms of existing copyrights eviscerates this deal, granting a windfall to corporate copyright holders and heirs of famous artists in exchange for nothing, since the creators are mostly dead.
- Rather than a lack of will, what Latin America suffers from is a set of interlocking institutional crises that eviscerate the democratic order without necessarily promoting dictatorship.
- He lied us into two hideously unfair tax cuts; he lied us into an unnecessary war with disastrous consequences; he lied us into the Patriot Act, eviscerating our freedoms.
- He learned from it, for here he eviscerates American culture as he defines class distinctions.
- He is simply an unwitting victim of circumstance; a convenient scapegoat for eviscerating the rule of law.
- As one might expect, he's wasting no time eviscerating the sports media.
- An appellate tribunal overturned the original opinion that had eviscerated free speech rights.
- It takes a lot of chutzpah to denounce the unhealthy influence of campaign contributions at the exact moment you are eviscerating the spirit of our campaign laws.
- Giving ‘disposal’ passive content would eviscerate that plain purpose.
- Third, this is also the argument against ‘triggers’ that end the tax cuts if the deficit dwindles, because it eviscerates the restraints on government growth imposed by the tax cuts.
- None of these possibilities are likely to unfold, however, if the promise of economic security for retirement is eviscerated in the meantime.
- He both eviscerates the Democrats' arguments and puts the issue in Constitutional perspective.
- The government's proposed monitoring would have eviscerated the attorney-client privilege.
- The real issue today is how to beat the insurgency without eviscerating the American military to do it.
- 1.2Surgery Remove the contents of (a body organ).
〔外科〕取出(眼球)内的东西
OriginLate 16th century: from Latin eviscerat- ‘disembowelled’, from the verb eviscerare, from e- (variant of ex-) ‘out’ + viscera ‘internal organs’. |