English adjective: eviscerate | |||
| 1. | eviscerate having been disembowelled | ||
| Similar | injured | ||
| Antonyms | uninjured | ||
English verb: eviscerate | |||
| 1. | eviscerate (contact) surgically remove a part of a structure or an organ | ||
| Synonyms | resect | ||
| Pattern of use | Somebody ----s something | ||
| Broader (hypernym) | remove, take, take away, withdraw | ||
| Domain category | medicine, practice of medicine | ||
| 2. | eviscerate (change) remove the contents of | ||
| Samples | Eviscerate the stomach. | ||
| Pattern of use | Somebody ----s something | ||
| Broader (hypernym) | empty | ||
| Domain category | medicine, practice of medicine | ||
| 3. | eviscerate (change) remove the entrails of | ||
| Samples | Draw a chicken. | ||
| Synonyms | disembowel, draw | ||
| Pattern of use | Somebody ----s something. Somebody ----s somebody | ||
| Broader (hypernym) | remove, take, take away, withdraw | ||
| 4. | eviscerate (change) take away a vital or essential part of | ||
| Samples | The compromise among the parties eviscerated the bill that had been proposed. | ||
| Pattern of use | Somebody ----s something. Something ----s something | ||
| Broader (hypernym) | devitalise, devitalize | ||