torturesome / ˈtɔr tʃər /

折磨人拷问人拷问酷刑

torturesome2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the act of inflicting excruciating pain, as punishment or revenge, as a means of getting a confession or information, or for sheer cruelty.
  2. a method of inflicting such pain.
  3. Often tortures. the pain or suffering caused or undergone.
v. 有主动词 verb

tor·tured, tor·tur·ing.

  1. to subject to torture.
  2. to afflict with severe pain of body or mind: My back is torturing me.
  3. to force or extort by torture: We'll torture the truth from his lips!

torturesome 近义词

torturesome

等同于 excruciating

更多torturesome例句

  1. One night he listened to a friendly old man slowly die alone in the next cell after a bout of torture.
  2. These were people who had just escaped the most horrific abuse and torture, and violation from their own families.
  3. She wrote her resident’s thesis on political disappearances and torture cases archived by the Human Rights Foundation of Turkey.
  4. The same month, President Buhari signed into law the Anti-Torture Act, which criminalized torture.
  5. Many of them live in secrecy for fear of torture and execution.
  6. But Chechen leader Kadyrov does not think that Committee Against Torture was needed in Chechnya.
  7. Torture, the UVa rape, police violence—we hunger for the facts, and then twist them.
  8. He also wrote, “Torture is not a thing that we can tolerate.”
  9. White House Must Decide Who Will Be Named in the CIA ‘Torture Report’
  10. Looking for a place to go, Alyokhina called her friends at a local human rights center, the Committee Against Torture.
  11. Torture may change your mind, as shame shall change your body.
  12. Torture indescribable has made of me a writhing, moaning, helpless creature for the past few minutes.
  13. Torture was still employed in capital cases to force confession even in Holland and France.
  14. Hercules in all the extremity of his Torture does not fall foul upon Religion.
  15. Torture was, therefore, at once employed to discover the hidden treasures.