- 看过 eviscerate 的人也看了 :
- gut
- weaken
- devitalize
eviscerate 的定义
e·vis·cer·at·ed, e·vis·cer·at·ing.
- to remove the entrails from; disembowel: to eviscerate a chicken.
- to deprive of vital or essential parts: The censors eviscerated the book to make it inoffensive to the leaders of the party.
- Surgery. to remove the contents of.
eviscerate 近义词
disembowel
eviscerate 的近义词 3 个
更多eviscerate例句
- When Victoria’s Secret announced it was revamping its brand, former “angel” Bridget Malcolm took to TikTok to eviscerate the company for the switch.
- After all, that’s where in 2013 the court eviscerated part of the Voting Rights Act, making way for bills like those proposed in Texas.
- The firm’s research also found that working from home, particularly for women, has completely eviscerated the boundaries between work and people’s personal lives.
- The justices stopped short of eviscerating the Voting Rights Act, but nevertheless did significant damage to this vital civil rights law and to the freedom to vote.
- Danielle Bernstein, head of WeWoreWhat, got eviscerated on the platform for stealing designs, outfits and content from smaller creators, often people of color.
- If paying your taxes is compelled speech in support of the government, can the First Amendment be used to eviscerate taxes?
- And yet, we witness professed Christians like Paul Ryan putting forward budgets that would eviscerate our common safety net.
- Romney appeared ready to “eviscerate Obamacare,” in the words of one attendee.
- Scientists are figuring out how to locate and eviscerate the worst moments of your life.
- Is it their custom to kill the wounded and to eviscerate such of their fellows as suffer damage?
- It is decided to catch a trout, eviscerate him, and obtain internal and indisputable evidence.