wounding 的 3 个定义
- an injury, usually involving division of tissue or rupture of the integument or mucous membrane, due to external violence or some mechanical agency rather than disease.
- a similar injury to the tissue of a plant.
- an injury or hurt to feelings, sensibilities, reputation, etc.
- to inflict a wound upon; injure; hurt.
- to inflict a wound.
wounding 近义词
cause bodily damage
cause mental hurt
更多wounding例句
- She was found with several wounds on her body and her face was disfigured.
- “They had to be taken to the hospital that night for their wounds to be stitched, but thankfully no one lost their life,” he said.
- I wound up working for him for a few summers when we were in our early 20s.
- To be sure, a majority of the 1,126 workers we looked at wound up in software and internet-focused industries, which include unsurprising names like Apple, Alphabet, and IBM.
- Repair cells, for example, send out filopodia to detect chemical cues to navigate to wound sites.
- Saved from the public gallows, Weeks was virtually exiled from the city, and wound up in Mississippi, where he raised a family.
- But those strands of his identity are all wound around the conspiracy that led him back to Gambia for the first time in 23 years.
- As the interview wound down, Bentivolio reflected on what may have motivated him to dress as Santa.
- But others say a still-unidentified man likely fired the round that caused a lethal head wound.
- The cop lay open-eyed with a grievous head wound as Johnson again checked for a pulse.
- The grass had a delightful fragrance, like new-mown hay, and was neatly wound around the tunnel, like the inside of a bird's-nest.
- Ripperda's equipage wound down a long and twisting defile between two precipitous rocks.
- It was little better than coal dust, and would not carry a ball fifty paces to kill or wound.
- The Taube has been bothering us again, but wound up its manœuvres very decently by killing some fish for our dinner.
- After this it wound along on ridges and in ravines till it reached the heart of a great pine forest, where stood a saw-mill.