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excoriate
▪ I. excoriate, v. (ɛksˈkɔərɪeɪt) Also pa. pple. 6–9 excoriate. [f. L. excoriāt- ppl. stem of excoriāre to strip off the hide, f. ex- out + corium hide.] † 1. trans. To pull off the skin or hide from (a man or beast); to flay. Obs.1614 Raleigh Hist. World III. 41 Otanes..whom Cambyses had excoriated...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Disembowelment (album)
Track listing
Disc 1
"The Tree of Life and Death"
"Your Prophetic Throne of Ivory"
"Excoriate"
"Nightside of Eden"
"A Burial at Ornans"
"The Spirits of
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excoriated
excoriated, ppl. a. (ɛksˈkɔərɪeɪtɪd) [f. excoriate v. + -ed1.] Having the skin or rind rubbed or stripped off. Also transf. and fig.1661 Lovell Hist. Anim. & Min. 49 The decoction of a Fox excoriated and embowelled..used as an embrocation. 1676 Wiseman Chirurg. Treat. (J.), An hypersarcosis arises u...
Oxford English Dictionary
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deglubate
† deˈglubate, v. Obs. rare. [irreg. f. L. dēglūbĕre to peel, flay (f. de- I. 3 + glūbĕre to peel, flay) + -ate.] trans. To flay, excoriate.1623 Cockeram, Deglubate, to fley a thing. 1698 Fryer Acc. E. Ind. & P. 297 To prevent the sharp Winds deglubating us, we housed our selves Cap-a-pee under Felts...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Tell off Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of TELL OFF is reprimand, excoriate. How to use tell off in a sentence. reprimand, excoriate; to number and set apart; especially : to assign to a special duty…
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Austorc de Segret
But among the humans Austorc is nonetheless willing to excoriate for the failed Crusade is Louis's brother Charles of Anjou, the (head and guide)—in Austorc's
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Will Blythe
"It’s not that I necessarily want to disparage," he concluded, "but I want the freedom to do so, to be able to criticize, to attack, to carp, to excoriate
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convulnerate
† conˈvulnerate, v. Obs. rare. [f. ppl. stem of L. convulnerāre, f. con- intensive + vulnerāre to wound.] trans. To wound all round, or severely.1609 J. Davies Holy Roode 13 (D.) As thornes did His head convulnerate, So rods all round Him did excoriate.
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Samuel G. Bugh
Bugh then went on to excoriate the Buchanan appointees in Wisconsin for their hypocrisy in voting against his mocking resolution.
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excoriation
excoriation (ɛksˌkɔərɪeɪʃən) [f. excoriate v.: see -ation. Cf. F. excoriation.] 1. The action of excoriating; the state of being excoriated: † a. the action or process of flaying (a man or beast (obs.)); b. the action of abrading a portion of the cuticle, or of the coating of any organ of the body; ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Sarah Binks
Hiebert's gentle brand of humour is recognizable to some in Canada, it is not uncommon for Americans to believe Sarah Binks to have been a real person and to excoriate
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Don Burke
If someone fell short of the mark, he would excoriate them. He was unforgiving."
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Venus Envy (novel)
As the society around her seeks to excoriate her for her sexual identity and those close to her are afraid to be painted with the same incriminating brush
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Zhou Enlai: The Last Perfect Revolutionary
According to Gao, "his attitude toward Zhou is neither to conceal his faults, nor to excoriate him" and that, "as he himself later revealed, he was quite
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