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词汇 carnage
释义

Definition of carnage in English:

carnage

noun ˈkɑːnɪdʒˈkɑrnɪdʒ
mass noun
  • The killing of a large number of people.

    大屠杀

    the bombing was timed to cause as much carnage as possible
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Trenches became mass graves in scenes of terrible carnage as 1,000 men fell dead or wounded.
    • The unimaginable carnage he witnessed at the front is captured in the moving words of a poem he wrote that day.
    • They were doing their jobs, not taking pleasure in creating random carnage.
    • The doors were blown off the stables and inside was a scene of carnage.
    • Drink driving used to be socially acceptable, and the result was carnage on our roads.
    • There was horror everywhere, but even amid such carnage, some sights were almost too much to bear.
    • In the Philippines campaign, the fight to liberate Manila ended in carnage.
    • Extend this thinking to our roads and there would be even more carnage.
    • The Christmas carnage on the roads is a phenomenon of which the police are also aware.
    • He said drinking and speeding were the two biggest causes of carnage on the roads.
    • It is simply a desire for a better kind of future out of carnage and loss.
    • It is time we became more shocked by the terrible carnage on our roads.
    • The United Nations was set up after two wars involving the worst carnage imaginable to try and prevent a repeat.
    • For this day of carnage and tears there can be no justification or excuse.
    • These promised signs should be put in place before there is more carnage on that stretch of road.
    • Hundreds of thousands of British servicemen died in the terrible carnage of the Second World War.
    • The family were confronted by scenes of carnage when they returned later in the day.
    • He was one of the few journalists who described the human carnage at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
    • The only problems I can see with the film are it's length and the will to show scenes of carnage on the streets of New York.
    • The next morning, they wake to a scene of carnage, with no recollection of having fallen asleep.
    Synonyms
    slaughter, massacre, mass murder, mass destruction, butchery, bloodbath, indiscriminate bloodshed, bloodletting, annihilation, destruction, decimation, havoc
    holocaust, pogrom, ethnic cleansing
    informal shambles

Origin

Early 17th century: from French, from Italian carnaggio, from medieval Latin carnaticum, from Latin caro, carn- 'flesh'.

  • carnival from mid 16th century:

    Originally a carnival was, in Roman Catholic countries, the period before Lent, a time of public merrymaking and festivities. It comes from medieval Latin carnelevamen ‘Shrovetide’. The base elements of the Latin word are caro, carn- ‘flesh’ and levare ‘to put away’, before the meat-free fasting of Lent began. There is a popular belief that carnival is from carne vale, ‘farewell, meat’, but this is mistaken. Other flesh-related words that come from caro include carnivorous (late 16th century), carnage (early 17th century), carnation (late 16th century) (from the flower's ‘fleshy’ colour), carrion (Middle English), and incarnation (Middle English).

Definition of carnage in US English:

carnage

nounˈkärnijˈkɑrnɪdʒ
  • The killing of a large number of people.

    大屠杀

    the bombing was timed to cause as much carnage as possible
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He was one of the few journalists who described the human carnage at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
    • It is time we became more shocked by the terrible carnage on our roads.
    • The unimaginable carnage he witnessed at the front is captured in the moving words of a poem he wrote that day.
    • The next morning, they wake to a scene of carnage, with no recollection of having fallen asleep.
    • The only problems I can see with the film are it's length and the will to show scenes of carnage on the streets of New York.
    • Hundreds of thousands of British servicemen died in the terrible carnage of the Second World War.
    • The family were confronted by scenes of carnage when they returned later in the day.
    • Drink driving used to be socially acceptable, and the result was carnage on our roads.
    • For this day of carnage and tears there can be no justification or excuse.
    • The doors were blown off the stables and inside was a scene of carnage.
    • The Christmas carnage on the roads is a phenomenon of which the police are also aware.
    • He said drinking and speeding were the two biggest causes of carnage on the roads.
    • Trenches became mass graves in scenes of terrible carnage as 1,000 men fell dead or wounded.
    • Extend this thinking to our roads and there would be even more carnage.
    • The United Nations was set up after two wars involving the worst carnage imaginable to try and prevent a repeat.
    • There was horror everywhere, but even amid such carnage, some sights were almost too much to bear.
    • They were doing their jobs, not taking pleasure in creating random carnage.
    • It is simply a desire for a better kind of future out of carnage and loss.
    • These promised signs should be put in place before there is more carnage on that stretch of road.
    • In the Philippines campaign, the fight to liberate Manila ended in carnage.
    Synonyms
    slaughter, massacre, mass murder, mass destruction, butchery, bloodbath, indiscriminate bloodshed, bloodletting, annihilation, destruction, decimation, havoc

Origin

Early 17th century: from French, from Italian carnaggio, from medieval Latin carnaticum, from Latin caro, carn- ‘flesh’.

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